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This  BOOK  may  be  kept  out  TWO  WEEKS 
ONLY,    and    is    subject    to    a    fine    of    FIVE 
CENTS  a   day  thereafter.     It  is   due   on  the 
day  indicated  below: 


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llOw 


Copyright,  1912, 

by 

PHILIP  HENRY   HALE, 

bditor, 

3550  Vista  Ayenue, 

St.  Louis,  Mo. 


THE     BOOK 


Live  Stock  Champions, 


Being  an  Artistic  Souvenir  Supplement 


OF     THE     MONTHLY 


National  Farmer 

and  Stock  Grower. 


COMPILED   AND   PUBLISHED    BY 

PHILIP    H/^^HALE 

EDITOR   AND    MANAGb-R, 

ST.  LOUIS,  MO. 


Complete   Volume,  1912. 


^^4'*********-h***+***-i-**************+******'t-'lr*4-4-****** 


Mr.  PHILIP    H.  HALE, 

Editor  and  Publisher 

Book  of  Live  Stock  Champions. 


4.4.4.4.4.44.4.4.^.4.4.4. 4.4-4-4-4-4'4-4'4-4'4'4'4-4-4-4-4-->'4-4-4-4-4--fr4-4-4-4'4'4-4'-i-4-4'-fr4-4'-fr4'-fr 


A   View  of  Onward,  4th. 

PREFACE. 


HIS  is  not  the  first  edition  of  the  Book  of 
Live  Stock  Champions,  and  we  hope  it 
will  not  be  the  last. 
The  intention  is  now  to  make  it  an  Annual, 
issuing  one  book  each  year.  This  represents  the 
issue  of  the  year  1912,  and  may  be  regarded  as 
Volume  No.  1,  because  it  contains  the  best  sub- 
jects of  all  former  editions. 

if  there  are  any  fam  )us  animals  conspicu(  usly 
absent  from  this  volume,  future  editions  will  make 
up  the  deficiency. 

The  publisher  will  not  rest  until  all  improved 
breeds  are  represented  by  their  most  meritorious 
and  famous  animals. 


Photograph  by  R.  J.  Rogerson.  5^'|^4:0 


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□  □ 


Head  of  My  Lady  Dainty. 


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QnaQnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn 

□    The  Book  of  Live  Stock  Champions*    □ 

nnnnpnnnonnnnnnnnnnnnnannnnnnnnnnnnnnnnDnnnnnnpnnnnnn 


-NETHERLEA,  five  years  old.      A  cham- 
Winner    of    first    prize,    open    class    in 
harness,    Chicago    International    Exposition,    19  00.       Shown    by    Peter 
Walker  &  Sons,  of  Liverpool. 


CLYDESDALE  HORSE- 
pion    Liverpool    work    horse. 


ABERDEEN-ANGUS  COW — VALA.  Champion  of  the  breed  for 
several  seasons,  including  Chicago  International  Exposition  and 
American  Royal  Show.  Was  champion  at  every  show  in  which  she 
was  exhibited,  and  during  her  life  was  without  a  peer  as  an  Aberdeen- 
Angus  cow.  Died  in  transit  while  on  show  circuit  in  1904,  when  she 
was  ownel  by  W.  B.  Seeley,  of  Mount  Pleasant,  la. 


Library 
N.  C,  State  Colle«r© 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


PURE-BRED  ABERDEEN-ANGUS  STEER — ADVANCE.  Grand 
champion  of  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1900.  Sold 
for  the  record-breaking  price  of  .111. .5  0  per  pound  on  foot  by  Bowles 
Live  Stock  Commission  Company  to  Schwarzschild  &  Sulsberger.  Fed 
by  Stanley  R.  Pierce,  of  Creston,  111.  ADVANCE  is  first  of  a  line  of 
grand  champion  beef  steers  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock 
Exposition.  He  was  followed  by  The  Woods  Principal  in  1901; 
Shamrock  in  1902;  Challenger  in  1903;  and  Clear  Lake  Jute  in  1904. 
These  steers  are  all  in  this  edition  of  The  Book  of  LiveStockChampions. 


BARBARA  McHENRY,  2-lth,  and  GLENFOIL  THICKSET,  2d— 
Champion  Aberdeen-Angus  cow  and  bull  at  the  Iowa  State  Fair,  Min- 
nesota State  Fair  and  Sioux  City  Interstate  Fair.  Exhibited  by  W.  A. 
McHenry,  of  Denison,  Iowa.  This  is  a  fine  pair.  When  this  picture 
was  taken  he  was  an  aged  champion  and  she  a  two-year-old.  At  the 
American  Royal  Show,  GLENFOIL  THICKSET,  2d,  was  grand  cham- 
pion cow,  and  her  sister  was  grand  champion.  They  won  many  other 
premiums. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


HEREFORD  COW — DOLLY,  2d.  Famous  show  cow.  First-prize 
winner  at  St.  Louis  and  many  State  Fairs.  This  magnificent  show  cow 
with  calf  by  her  side  was  sold  at  auction,  May  23,  1901,  by  John  Hooker, 
of  New  T  ondon,  Ohio,  to  N.  W.  Bowen,  of  Delphi,  Ind.,  for  $5,000. 


HEREFORD  COW— DOLLY,  5th,  71,988.  Champion  Hereford 
female,  Chicago  International  Exposition,  1900.  Bred  by  John  Hooker, 
of  New  London,  Ohio.  Sold  after  exhibition,  with  calf  at  side,  to  C.  A. 
Jamison,  of  Peoria,  111.,  for  $3,150. 


10 


THE    ROOK    OF    I.IVK    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


HJi^KEFORD  STEER— THE  WOODS  PRINCIPAL,  as  champion 
calf  at  the  Chicago  International  Exposition,  1900.  Exhibited  by  Geo. 
P.  Henry,  of  Goodenow,  111.,  .John  Letham,  herd  manager  and  feeder. 
THE  WOODS  PRINCIPAL  appears  again  as  yearling  and  grand  cham- 
pion steer,  1901. 


llEKI'Ji' olv  I )  (A  I  !  I.l'j  -I'l  Kt-'r-l'UiZhJ  iil'JKI).  In  procession  at 
the  Great  St.  Louis  Fair,  1899.  A  famous  show  herd,  owned  by 
Thomas  Clark,  of  Beeoher,  111. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


11 


THE  FAMOI'S  TRY  HORSE  '  D  \X  '  Owned  by  Campbell  &  Reid 
and  the  Western  Sale  Stables  Company  at  the  St.  Louis  National  Stock 
Yards.  Champion  work  horse,  used  for  the  purpose  of  trying  other 
horses  by  his  side,  to  see  if  they  can  work  or  not.  Has  worked  beside 
a  Quarter  of  a  million  horses  and  done  ten-years'  service  on  the  St. 
Louis  market. 


DUTCH  BELTED  ro^— LADY  CLARENCE.  First-prize  winner 
and  champion  at  the  principal  Eastern  State  Fairs.  Representative  of 
the  magnificent  Valley  Farm  herd  owned  by  Mrs.  S.  A.  F.  Servin,  of 
Valley  Farm,  Warwick,  N.  Y.  This  breed  has  its  great  home  in  the 
Eastern  States,  where  their  dairy  qualities  are  highly  esteemed. 


12 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN  COW-  LADY  DE  VRIES  OF  ROCHESTER. 
Grand  sweepstakes  dairy  cow,  Ohio  State  Fair,  1899.  Exhibited  by 
W.  B.  Smith  &  Son.  of  Columbus,  O.  A  handsome,  useful  cow,  highly 
representative  of  the  Holstein  family. 


PERCHERON    STALLION — POUR-Ql'OIS-l'AS.      T  as 

as  champion  of  Chicago  International  Exposition,   r.tni    an,]    ;  :    i  im- 

ported   by    Dunham,    Fletcher    &    Coleman    and    afterwards    owned    by 
McLaugh-.n  Bros.,  of  Kansas  City,  Mo.,  Sioux  City,  la.,  and  Columbus,0. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  IS 


h^ 


9 


SADDLE  STALLION — HIGHLAND  FLOWER.  Owned  and  exhib- 
ited by  Gay  Bros.,  of  Pisgali,  Ky.  One  of  the  winners  at  the  Blue 
Grass  Fair.  19  01,  and  a  close  contestant  for  championship  honors. 
Pronounced  by  the  Farmer  and  Breeder  as  very  close  to  perfection  in 
the  saddle-horse  type.  From  photograph  by  Thos.  A.  Knight  &  Co.. 
Photographers,  Lexington,  Ky. 


SHORTHORN  COW— LADY  SHARON,  4th.  Female  Shorthorn 
champion  of  the  Chicago  International  Exposition,  1900;  also  champion 
at  many  State  Shows.  Exhibited  by  W.  A.  Belaud,  of  Gray  Tower, 
Grass  Lake,  Mich. 


14  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


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GALLOWAY  BT-LL-DRUID  OF  CASTLE:\rTLK.  17.0.-4  f6..519). 
Champion  of  Scotland,  1SS9;  Kansas  City  Royal  Show,  1902.  and  twice 
champion  of  Chicago  International  Exposition.  Imported  and  owned 
by  O.  H.  Swigart,  of  Champaign,  111. 


ILLUSTRIOUS      ANGORA      GOAT — PASHA      COLUMBIA.      The 

champion  at  Kansas  City  Royal  Show,  1901.   Owned  by  Mrs.  M.  Armer, 
of  Kingston,  N.  M.    This  is  one  of  the  heaviest-fleeced  goats  iu  America. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


15 


GUERNSEY  COW — LILLY  ELLA,  7,240.  Owned  by  Mrs.  Marion 
G.  Hathaway,  of  Trenton  .Junction.  N.  .J.  This  cow  is  a  wonder  in 
beauty  as  in  useful  capacity.  Record  at  five  years  old  under  public 
supervision,  12.2S2.68  pounds  of  milk,  6.4  per  cent,  fat,  782.16  pounds 
butter-fat,  equivalent  to  91 2. -5  pounds  of  butter,  in  one  year. 


_-.  ..-V— r 


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CHESTER  WHITE  MALE — "HAMLET."  Sired  by  World  Beater. 
Champion  boar  of  the  breed,  Chicago,  1901.  Exhibited  by  O.  N.  Phil- 
lips, of  Hamlet,  111.  As  a  three-year-old  this  boar  weighed  900  pounds. 
He  had  thickness  and  depth  to  be  looked  for  in  one  of  his  build. 


THE    ROOK    OF    IJVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


JERSEY  BULL— SILVERTNE  COOMARSIE,  5  5,600.  Winner  of 
first  prize  in  his  class  wherever  shown.  Never  beaten  for  sweepstakes 
by  any  bull  of  his  age.  Bred  and  raised  by  John  E.  Robbins,  of 
Greensburg,  Ind.  Since  his  first  appearance  in  The  Book  of  Live  Stock 
Champions  SILVERINE  COOMASSIE  had  the  distinguished  honor  of 
heading  the  champion  herd  at  tlie  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition. 


HEREFORD  BULL — DISTURBER.  139.9S9.  Bred  and  exhibited 
by  Geo.  P.  Henry,  of  Goodenow,  III.  First  at  Des  Moines,  la.;  first  at 
Indianapolis,  Ind.;  first  at  Chicago  International,  1902.  Picture  taken 
a6  a  youngster  at  the  Chicago  International. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  17 


LINCOLN  SHEEP — Aged  ewe.  First  in  class  and  champion,  St. 
Louis,  Mo.  Exhibited  by  J.  T.  Gibson,  of  Denfield,  Ontario,  Canada. 
This  picture  is  highly  representative  of  the  best  in  the  Lincoln  breed 
of  sheep. 


OXFORD  DOWN  SHEEP— Yearling  ram.      Champion  at  six  State 
Fairs  in  1902.     Owned  and  exhibited  by  R.  J.  Stone,  of  Stonington,  111. 


18 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


CLYDESDALE  HORSE— PRINCE  WILLIAM.  Champion  stallion 
any  age,  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1901.  Exhibited 
by  Alexander  Galhraith,  of  Janesville,  Wis.  PRINCE  WILLIAM  em- 
bodied about  all  that  is  best  in  tht^  type  of  Clydesdales. 


ANGORA  GOAT  KINO  OF  SIERRA.  First-premiuu,  ...uu;,.^  at 
Kansas  City  Royal  Show,  1902,  in  a  class  of  eighteen  of  the  linest  goats 
in  America.     Owned  by  Wra.  J.  Cohill,  a  Maryland  breeder  of  Angoras. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  19 


DUTCH  BELTED  BULL— CHARLES  THE  GREAT.  Winner  of 
fifty-four  first  premiums,  including  individual  herd  and  produce. 
Shown  for  seven  years  and  never  defeated  in  the  show  ring.  Valley 
Farm  herd  of  Mrs.  S.  A.  F    Servin,  of  Warwick,  N.  Y. 


HEREFORD      Brr,T>--ni  PORTED      ALRAXY.  iml 

featsd  English  champion.  Among  ALBANY'S  winnings  are;  First, 
Royal  and  Reserve  Champion  at  Cardiff;  First  and  Challenge  Cup  for 
best  male  or  female  at  Maddersfield,  and  first  in  class  and  champion 
bull  of  any  breed  (open  to  all  England)  at  London.  He  was  imported 
by  Mr.  C.  A.  Jamison,  of  Peoria,  111.,  and  since  the  dispersion  of  the 
Hamlet  Herefords,  heads  the  herd  of  Messrs.  Avery  &  Hlnes,  of  Alto 
Pass.  111. 


20 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


POTJ.ED  DURHAAT  BriJ,— COT.DEX  CxAT'^NTLET,  128.003. 
Undefeated  champion  bull  and  champion  sire  of  this  breed.  Twice 
senior  champion  at  the  Chicago  International  Show.  Exhibited  by 
J.  H.  Miller,  of  Peru,  Ind.  In  order  not.  to  lose  a  picture  from  life  in 
the  prime  of  this  famous  bull.  It  was  necessary  to  use  a  faded  photo- 
graph. 


HAMPSHIRE  DOWN  YEARLING  RA.M — A  Royal  winner  In 
England;  also  over  the  entire  American  cii-cuit.  including  the  Chicago 
International  in  1902.  Exhibited  by  John  Milton,  of  Marshall,  Mich., 
and  imported  by  him. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


21 


CLYDESDALE  MARE — CHERRY  STARTLE.  Champion  any  age, 
Chicago  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1901.  Exhibited  by  Graham  Bros.,  of 
Claremont,  Ontario,  Canada.  When  portrait  was  taken  she  was  three 
years  old  and  had  easily  beaten  all  competitors  at  many  shows. 


HEREFORD  BULL— POLSON,  49,230.  Owned  by  Lee  Bros.,  of 
San  Angelo,  Tex.  Sweepstakes  bull  at  Texas  State  Fair  several  years 
in  euccession  and  one  of  the  great  Missouri  Hereford  bulls  which  was 
successfully  acclimated  in  Texas. 


22 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


FRENCH  COACH  HORSE — PALADIN,  1,968.  This  horse  won 
championship  over  all  coach  and  carriage  breeds,  same  age  and  sex, 
including  Hackneys,  Gdrman  Coachers,  Trotters,  Thoroughbreds  and 
Cleveland  Bays,  Chicago  Horse  Show,  1897.  He  won  first  prize  at  the 
Chicago  Horse  Show  in  1897;  first  prize  at  the  Illinois  State  Fair, 
1899;  first  prize  for  his  get,  Minnesota  State  Fair.  1903.  Exhibited 
by  Dunham,  Fletcher  &  Coleman,  of  Wayne,  111. 


VICTORIA  SWINE-  (11  \:\IP IONS  OF  THEIR  BREED.  Exhibited 
at  many  shows  by  Davis  Eros.,  of  Dyer,  Ind.,  and  winning  many 
premiums.  These  exhibits  of  Victoria  swine  used  to  be  a  feature  of 
the  St.  Louis  Fair, 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


23 


A  FINE  SHOKrilOKX  KEMAI.E — DUCHESS.  II.  First  in  class  at 
St.  Louis  Fair,  19  00.  Then  owned  by  Aaron  Barber,  of  Avon,  N.  Y. 
This  picture  is  representative  of  a  fine  herd  of  cattle  now  one  of  the 
memories  of  the  breed.     She  was  champion  at  several  State  Fairs. 


SHROPSHIRE  SHEEP — YEARLING  RAM.  Champion  at  Indiana, 
Kentucky  and  St.  Louis  Fairs,  1902.  Exhibited  by  Geo.  Allen,  of 
Allertou,  111.     This  picture  was  taken  on  the  Fair  Grounds. 


24 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


ABERDEEN-ANGUS  BULL — DL\Z.  A  great  Scotch  representative 
of  the  Aberdeen-Angus  family.  First-prize  winner  at  principal  Scottish 
Shows.  Ancestors  of  animals  imported  into  this  country  and  making 
records.  ' 


THE  LITTLE  FOUR — STALLION  TEAM  OF  FOUR  BLACK 
SHETLAND  PONIES.  Exhibited  at  the  Chicago  Columbian  Exposi- 
tion by  G.  A.  Watkins,  of  Detroit,  Mich.  They  took  every  prize  on 
ponies  in  harness  and  were  the  best  bred,  best  matched,  best  trained, 
prettiest,  smallest  four-stallion  team  in  the  world.  Their  names  were 
PRINCE  OF  SHETLAND,  IMETKLE  JOHN.  PRIDE  OF  THE  ISLES  and 
MUCKLE  ROOL.  JLiibl  iU' 

N.  C,  Sta,te  CollRfr^ 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  25 


FIXAavJIAL  COUNTESS,  IT.:., HO — Imported  Jersey  cow.  This 
cow  takes  first  place  in  her  breed  in  dairj'  capacity.  In  one  year  (leap 
year)  she  gave  13,248  pounds  of  milk,  containing  795  pounds  4.6 
ounces  of  butter-fat,  equivalent  to  93.5  pounds  10  ounces  of  merchant- 
able butter  85  per  cent,  fat,  just  31  pounds  less  than  her  own  weight, 
her  weight  being  967  pounds.  Previously  FINANCIAL  COUNTESS 
made  a  private  churn  test  of  943  pounds  13  ounces  of    butter  in  one  year. 


GUERNSEY  COW— SUKE  OF  ROSENDALE.  One  of  the  most 
beautiful  of  the  Guernsey  family.  She  was  first-prize  winner  many 
times  from  1895  to  1898.  Has  record  of  427.1  pounds  of  butter  in  a 
year.     Exhibited  by  Geo.  C.  Hill  &  Son,  of  Rosendale,  Wis. 


26 


THE    BOOK    or    I.IVR    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


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TROTTING  STALLION— ETHAN  ALLEN,  2:25  Va  .  From  an  orig- 
inal copyright  photograph  by  Schreiber  &  Sons,  dated  1859,  being  one 
of  the  earliest  high-class  animal  photographs  in  existence.  ETHAN 
ALLEN  was  the  first  entire  trotter  to  beat  2:30.  Owned  by  the  late 
Colonel  Henry  S.  Russell,  of  Boston,  Mass. 


CHUUJE  GOODS — Imported  from  England.  Conquering  Shorthorn 
bull.  Always  firsif  in  class,  and  champion  at  the  Chicago  International 
Live  Stock  Exposition,  1902,  and  picture  taken  at  that  time.  Owned 
by  the  late  G.  M.  Casey,  of  Clinton.  Mo.  Another  later  picture  of 
CHOICE  GOODS  appears  in  this  volume. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LTVK    STOCK    CHAMPIONS 


A  FAMOUS  JUMPER — HEATHERBLOOM.  A  later  page  in  this 
book  will  contain  another  picture  of  this  famous  horse.  Owned  by 
Mr.  Howard  Willett,  of  White  Plains,  N.  Y. 


-z-^^  .U 


HEREFORD  BULL — BRITISHER,  145,996.  Imported  by  George 
Leigh  &  Co.,  of  Aurora,  111.  Winner  of  grand  sweepstakes  at  Chicago 
International  Exposition,  1902:  afterwards  sold  to  Giltner  Bros.,  of 
Eminence,  Ky.  Photograph  taken  in  the  show.  BRITISHER  has  the 
sole  distinction  of  being  champion  of  principal  shows  of  England  and 
America. 


28 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


TROTTING  SIRE— BINGEN,  2: 06 14.  At  Louisville,  Kv.,  Sep- 
tember 26,  189  8,  BINGEN,  then  five  years  old,  won  the  fastest  six-heat 
race,  taking  a  record  of  2:06%  in  the  first  heat,  wihich  was  the  world's 
champion  record  for  five-year-old  trotters.  Later  he  reduced  his  record 
to  2:061/4.     BINGEN  is  making  a  wonderful  record  as  sire  of  trotters. 


THREE- YEAR-OLD  SHORTHORN  BEEF  CATTLE — First-prize 
winners  at  Chicago  International  Show,  1902.  Fed  by  B.  F.  Harris,  of 
Champaign,  111.  This  load  averaged  1,694  pounds  and  was  sold  at 
$8.75  per  100  pounds  to  the  late  Simon  O'Donnell,  of  Pitteburg.  Pa., 
for  the  Pittsburg  Provision  Company.  Mr.  Harris  in  his  day,  for  flfty 
years,  was  one  of  the  foremost  cattle  feeders  in  the  United  States. 


THE    BOOK  OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


29 


^^^^^v^J^R^Bv^^1CZ4|j(pH^ 

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THE  i^REiNCHMAN — FAMOUS  SADDLE  GELDING.  The  seusa- 
tion  of  the  shows  of  1900.  Undefeated  in  all  rings  in  which  he  com- 
peted.     Exhibited  by  C.  F.  Neagle,  of  Lexington,  Ky. 


tiiiJKEiiUKD  I'EMALE — QUEENLY.  The  wonderful  two-year-old 
champion  in  class  and  best  Hereford  female  at  the  Chicago  Intetrna- 
tional  Exposition,  1902.  Exhibited  by  W.  S.  Van  Natta  &  Son,  of 
Fowler,  Ind.    Picture  taken  under  disadvantage  in  the  snow  at  ClaicagQ. 


30  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CIIAMnONS. 


SHlKE  HuKaE — BLAiSUON  PLUTO,  as  a  four-year-old.  Cham- 
pion Shire  stallion,  any  age,  at  Chicago  International  Exposition,  1901. 
Exhibited  by  Pioneer  Farm,  J.  G.  Truman,  Manager,  Bushnell,  111. 
This  is  a  great  bright  bay  horse,  with  white  legs,  weighing  2,000 
pounds,      ^le  was  imported. 


PRIZE-WINNING  COACH  IU)l;s)<J^>.  in  ins  tlay  iikmc  were  few 
better  strings  of  show  horses  than  those  owned  and  exhibited  by  John 
S.  Bratton.  of  the  St.  Louis  National  Stock  Yards.  The  picture  here- 
with represents  his  two  four-in-hands  tJiat  won  many  championships 
held  by  himself.     Photograph  taken  in  the  year  1904. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


31 


PIETERTJE  MAID  ORMSBY,  78,0ol,  A.  R.  O.,  at  three  years, 
three  months,  butter,  seven  days,  2fi.l7  poiinds;  average  fat,  4.18  per 
cent.;  in  thirty  days,  107.78  pounds;  average  fat,  4.17  per  cent.; 
world's  record  for  class.  A.  R.  O.  at  six  years,  butter,  seven  days, 
35.56  pounds;  average  fat,  5.31  per  cent.;  in  thirty  days,  145.66 
pounds;  average  fat,  4.54  per  cent. ;  world's  record  for  thirty  days. 
Owned  at  Woodlake  Stock  Farm,  Minneapolis. 


ROAN  KING — Grade  Shorthorn.  Grand  champion  beef  steer  at 
the  Chicago  International  Show,  19  07.  Exhibited  by  his  breeder,  Mr. 
James  Leask,  of  Greeubank,  Ontario,  Canada.  Weight  at  show,  1,080 
pounds.  Although  called  a  calf,  ROAN  KING  was  fifteen  months  old 
when  exhibited.  He  gained  2y^  pounds  a  day  from  birth  to  the  block. 
ROAN  KING  was  not  over  fat  or  any  way  unusually  developed.  He 
was  a  perfect  baby  beef  and  a  Champion  of  Champions. 


32 


THE    ROOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


i 

r 

1 

i 

CLYDESDALE  HORSE— SENSATION,  twelve  years  old.  A  work 
horse  from  Liverpool.  Winner  of  the  Clydesdale  special  in  harness, 
Chicago,  1900.  Shown  by  Peter  Walker  &  Sons,  of  Liverpool,  England, 
as  an  example  of  the  great  power,  endurance  and  value  of  the  Clydes- 
dale horse.  i 


I.  (  »\\\  \  l:i  '.  Mil.  i  :':;,r,;t4.  ciiainpioii  Here- 
ford bu..  ...  ,;.,.v_.,w.,.  iCo.\al  Stock  Showb,  I'JUo  and  1904.  One  of  the 
great  modern  bulls  of  the  Hereford  family.  Bought  and  owned  by 
S.  L.  Standish,  Hume  herd  of  Hereford  cattle,  Hume.  Mo. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


33 


GUERNSEY  BULL — LORD  STRANFORD.  One  of  the  most 
illustrious  of  his  breed.  LORD  STRANFORD  was  sired  by  Chronicler, 
and  his  dam  was  Miss  Maggie.  He  was  calved  May  31st,  1S88,  and 
imported  July  17th,  1889.  LORD  STRANFORD  began  his  career  by 
winning  first  prize  at  the  Royal  Guernsey  Agricultural  Society,  Island 
of  Guernsey,  in  1889.  In  1890  he  won  first  in  two-year-old  class  and 
head  of  first-prize  herd  at  New  York  State  Fair,  also  at  New  York  and 
New  England  Fair,  at  Albany.  From  1891  to  1894  he  was  twelve 
times  head  of  first-prize  herd  and  as  many  times  individually  first- 
prize  winner.  His  record  at  the  Columbian  World's  Fair  was  first 
prize  in  aged  bull  class,  winner  of  sweepstakes  and  head  of  prize  herd. 
LORD  STRANFORD  was  owned  and  exhibited  by  G.  Howard  Davidson, 
of  Altamont  Stock  Farm,  Milbrook,  Duchess  county.  New  York. 


DELAINE  RAM — WONDERFUL,  700.  Grand  champion  Delaine 
ram,  AVorld's  Columbian  Exposition,  Chicago,  1893.  Bred  by  H.  G. 
McDowell,  of  Canton,  Ohio.  This  picture  was  made  from  an  indistinct 
photograph  in  order  to  preserve  the  appearance  of  one  of  the  grandest 
Merino  rams  which  ever  lived. 


34  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CTTAMPIOXS. 


SUFFOLK  STALLION— THEODORE,  140.  Chestnut,  two  years 
old.  Winner  of  first  prize,  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  i901. 
Owned  by  Alex  Galbraitli  &  Sou,  ot  Janesville,  Wis. 


LEICESTER  RA:\I~Sweepstakes  winner,   World's  Fair,   Chicago, 
1893.     Owned  by  Mr.  Jno.  Kelley,  of  Shakespeare,  Ontario,  Canada. 


THF]    BOOK    OF    IJVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


35 


Till']  i.Mi'<)irri':!i  i  a  ;•,  ;".,ji;:,  — i.u-:.i  \>-v>.^-\  hull.    WimuM- or  m-si 

prize,  St.  Clement's  Show,  Island  of  .Jersey,  ]fM)5  and  1906;  son  of 
Eminent's  Raleigh,  sire  of  sixteen  prize  winners,  and  seventeen  daugh- 
ters with  high  butter  tests;  his  dam  was  Fontaine's  Gold  Medal,  cham- 
pion female,  St.  Clement's  Show,  1906;  also  Gold  Medal  winner  in 
butter  test.  THE  JAP  has  scored  9  8.02  per  cent,  of  a  perfect  scale  of 
points  by  Jersey  cattle  standards.  THE  JAP  is  the  herd  bull  at  Meri- 
dale  Farms,  Meredith,  Delaware  county,  New  York.  Owned  by  Ayer 
&  McKinney,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


PETERJ  PRINCE  McKEAN  —  FOUR-YEAR-OLD  HOLSTEIN 
BULL.  First-prize  winner  and  champion  at  New  York  State  and 
other  Fairs.  Highly  representative  Holstein-Friesian  bull.  Ownecl 
by  T.  A.  Mitcliell,  of  Weedsport,  N.  Y. 


36 


THE  BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS 


HEAVIEST  ST1:i:r  ox  i:f.(  OFiD — Winner  of  Gold  Medal  at 
Chicago  Columbian  Exposition,  1893.  Official  weight,  3,755  pounds. 
This  steer  does  not  have  the  appearance  of  furnishing  the  largest 
proportion  of  choice  cuts  of  meat  to  weight  of  carcass,  but  considering 
his  extreme  heavy  weight,  he  was  far  from  being  a  freak.  BILLY 
was  exhibited  round  the  country,  especially  in  Texas,  as  a  show  in 
himself,  and  his  weight  was  claimed  to  have  reached  the  4,000-pound 
mark  before  he  died. 


GUERNSEY  COW— GYPSY  OP  RACINE,  9,639.  Owned  by  Geo. 
C.  Hill  &  Son,  of  Rosendale,  Wis.  Yearly  record,  11,246.8  pounds  of 
milk,  713  pounds  of  butter;  also  18  pounds  11.7  ounces  of  butter  in 
seven  days.     One  of  the  great  aged  cows  in  the  Guernsey  family. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


37 


38 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SHORTHORN  HEIFER — MISSJE,  165.  MISSIE,  16.5,  was  a 
phenomenal  yearling,  and  her  death,  which  happened  before  maturity, 
was  a  matter  of  great  regret  in  the  Shorthorn  breeding  fraternity. 
She  was  younger,  but  of  the  same  character  as  Ruberta,  and  contested 
honors  with  her.  MISSIE  was  a  rich  roan  of  beautiful  finish,  shapely 
feminine  outlines,  wide  and  level  of  back,  with  well-filled  ciuarters  and 
deeply-fleshed  thighs — a  model  Shorthorn. 


AYRSI11R1-:  COW  i;()SK  ''IJONXA.  llj:.::.  !;•  -  ;  -,^64 
pounds  of  milk  in  36.5  consecutive  days;  455  pounds  of  buitur  in  365 
consecutive  days.  Winner  of  first  premium  at  Vermont  State  Fair  at 
Burlington,  1S9  7,  for  largest  amount  of  butter-fat  from  one  day's 
milking.  Thirteen  cows  in  competition.  First  prize  in  the  ring, 
Vermont  St^t^  F^ir.    Br^d  and  owced  by  C.  M.  Winslow,  of  Brandon,Vt, 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVFJ    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


39 


SHETLAND  PONY  STALLION  —  CHAMPION  PRINCE  OF 
WALES.  Registered  number,  1,160.  Foaled  June  16th,  1891. 
Color,  black.  Height,  89  inches.  The  greatest  show  pony  of  the  day. 
The  sire  of  more  winners  than  any  pony  in  America.  The  sire  of  the 
pony  commanding  the  largest  offer  ever  made  for  a  Shetland  in 
America.  Awarded  twelve  championships  at  National  Horse  Shows 
and  State  Fairs.  First  prize  two-year-old,  Chicago  World's  Fair, 
1893;  first-prize  stallion,  three  years  old  and  over,  Pan-American, 
1901.      Owned  by  Charles  E.  Bunn,  of  Peoria,  111. 


ABERDEEN-ANGUS  CATTT>E — First  prize  in  Eastern  District, 
fat  steers,  two  years  old  and  under  three.  International  Live  Stock 
Exposition,  1901.  Average  weight,  1,631  pounds  at  thirty-one  months. 
Bred,  fed  and  exhibited  by  I>.  H.  Kerrick,  of  Bloomington,  111.  An- 
other load  by  Mr.  Kerrick,  the  champions  of  1900,  will  be  found  in 
this  book. 


40 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


ABERDEEN-ANGUS  GRADE  STEERS— The  champion  car-load 
at  the  Chicago  Fat  Stock  Show  of  1900.  Fed  by  L.  H.  Kerrick,  of 
Bloomington,  111.,  and  sold  by  Clay,  Robinson  &  Co.  at  $1.5.50  per  100 
pounds.  Average  weight  as  two-year-olds,  1,492  pounds;  percentage 
of  beef,  64.37.  Of  all  the  champion  car-loads  of  beef  cattle  exhibited 
at  the  Chicago  International  Show  this  load  is  more  distinctly  remem- 
bered than  the  others,  probably  because  the  photograph  is  the  best 
and  because  the  well-known  champion  feeder  stands  alone  by  his 
cattle  in  the  picture. 


HAMPSHIRE  DOWN  RAM — TWO  YEARS  OLD.  First-prize 
winner  and  champion,  Pan-American  Exposition,  1901;  also  at  St. 
Louis.     Exhibited  by  John  Milton,  of  Marshall,  Mich. 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


41 


LITTLE  BOY  PERFECT — THE  WONDERFUL  PONY.  Has 
taken  over  100  blue  ribbons  in  the  show  ring.  Exhibited  by  John  S. 
Bratton,  of  the  St.  Louis  National  Stock  Yards. 


COTSWOLD  Slli.l.i  .vL.  Li;  ].,.!..  ill.,.  1.1, ,.o  V.  iiiiior  and  cham- 
pion at  several  Fairs,  including  St.  Louis,  in  1902.  Exhibited  by 
Lewis  Bros.,  of  Camp  Point,  111.  This  ewe  was  on  the  circuit  several 
years  and  never  failed  to  win  championship  prizes  and  represented  the 
great  mutton  and  wool-grow^ing  qualities  of  the  Cotswold  sheep. 


42 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


CLYDESDALE  MARE— PRINCESS  HANDSOME.  Four  years  old. 
Winner  of  first  prize  three  years  in  succession  at  Chicago  Interna- 
tional Live  Stock  Show;  also  champion  at  State  Fairs.  Bred  and 
owned  by  IMcLay  Bros.,  of  Janesville,  Wis. 


CHAMPION  LOAD  OF  CHESTER  WHITE  HOGS — Picture  taken 
on  the  farm  of  the  breeder  and  exhibitor,  E.  D.  Funk,  of  Shirley,  111. 
These  were  champions  at  the  International  Live  Stock  Show  of  1908. 
The  average  weight  of  fifty-six  hogs  was  302  pounds. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SADDLE  STALLION— ARTIST  MONTROSE,  51,  A.  S.  H.  R. 
Owned  by  A.  F.  Wyckoff,  of  Appleton  City,  Mo.  Exhibited  by  Jeff 
Bridgford,  of  Paris,  Mo.  Winner  of  first  prize  in  Stallion  Class,  St. 
Louis  Fair, 1899, and  champion  at  Chicago  Columbian  Exposition, 1893. 


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CHESTER  WHITE  BOAR — YvORLD'S  BEATER.  First-prize 
winner  in  class  and  champion  at  St.  Louis  and  other  P'airs;  also  first 
in  class  for  two-year-olds  and  over,  Chicago  International  Live  Stock 
Exposition,  1902.     Exhibited  by  Dorsey  Bros..  o£  Perry,  III. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS 


PERCHERON  MARE— MOUVETTE.  Champion  at  Chicago  In- 
ternational Live  Stock  Exposition,  1902;  Minnesota,  1903;  Illinois  and 
other  Fairs  in  1904.  Owned  and  exhibited  by  Dunham,  Fletcher  & 
Coleman,  of  Wayne,  111. 


SCOTCH  BLACK-FACE  SHEEP— Champion  ram  of  Scottish  High- 
land Show  of  1902.     Shown  as  a  curiosity  in  sheep  raising. 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  45 


GUERNSEY  COW — PRIMROSE  TRICKSEY,  7,236.  Official 
record  for  a  year,  9,277  pounds  of  milk.  Average  per  cent,  fat,  5.48. 
Butter,  5  92.6  pounds.  Ov/ned  by  George  C.  Hill  &  Son,  of  Rosendale, 
Wis.      One  of  the  high  ijroductive  and  beautiful  Guernseys. 


LOAD  OF  HOGS  THAT  OBTAINED  A  NEW  TOP  ON  THE 
MARKET.  The  picture  herewith  represents  a  load  of  hogs  shipped  by 
John  A.  Adams,  of  Warrensburg,  Mo.,  to  the  St.  Louis  market.  There 
were  fifty-two  head,  averaging  2  89  pounds,  and  sold  at  $8.25  per  100 
pounds  by  Clay,  Robinson  &  Co.,  live  stock  commission  agents.  This 
was  on  November  18th,  1911,  and  the  price  paid  was  not  only  the  top 
of  the  market  for  the  day,  but  the  highest  price  paid  for  a  straight 
load  of  market  hogs  for  forty-four  days. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


PURE-BRED  CLYDESDALE  DRAFT  HORSES— Owned  by 
Xelson  Morris  &  Co.,  and  first-prize  winners  in  harness  ai;  the  Chicago 
International  Live  Stoclt  Exposition,  1900.  Imported  by  Geo.  :Moore, 
of  Waterloo,  Ontario,  Canada.  These  horses  weighed  1,R.50  pounds 
each  and  carried  themselves  proudly  with  an  elastic  step.  They  were 
the  wheelers  of  the  six-in-hand  rig  which  won  over  the  crack  teams 
exhibited  by  other  Chicago  packers. 


THE  FAT^IOrS  WHITE  SHORTHORN  BULL  SPECULATOR— 
Four  years  old;  weighs  2,6!K)  jjo'inds.  Owned  by  E.  W.  Bowen,  of 
Delphi,  Ind.  One  of  the  best  Shorthorn  bulls  in  the  United  States. 
He  was  champion  of  the  Pan-American  Shorthorns. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  47 


PACING  STA[.I.1().\  aXI)  SI  iH^J— BlIOW  X  HAL,  I'M-i^-  Ownerl 
by  the  late  Geo.  Campbell  Brown,  of  Spring  Hill,  Tenn.  Sire  of  Star 
Pointer,  1:591/4;  Hal  Dillard,  2:04%;  Star  Hal,  2:04%;  Hal  Chaffln, 
2:0.51/4;  and  many  other  great  pacers. 


A  FAMOUS  BERKSHIRE  BOAR — KING  ^NIARVIE.  as  a  two-year- 
old.  Photograph  taken  in  1900  at  St.  Louis  Fair,  when  he  weighed 
800  pounds.  Has  since  won  many  premiums.  Bred  by  John  F.  Stover, 
of  Indiana.  This  is  one  of  the  best  pictures  of  a  typical  Berkshire  boar 
in  existence. 


48 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


TYPICAL  rOLO  PONY — BINGO.   Winner  of  several  blue  ribbons 
in  Polo  Pony  class  at  Eastern  Horse  Shows.   From  photo  by  Schreiber. 


HEREFORD  CATTLE — Swoepslakes-winning  calves  of  the 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Show  and  Exposition,  1902.  Bred 
and  shown  by  the  Nebraska  Land  and  Feeding  Company.Ellsworth.Neb. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


49 


PERCHElluA  rM  vi.i.iv).\-  (.jit  v.\(,k^ i  10.  Percheron  stallion, 
(45,088)  29,606,  a  dark  gray,  and  was  foaled  April  15,  1899.  He  was 
bred  by  M.  Tessier,  of  France.  His  sire  was  Jules  (37,987)  and  his 
dam  Pelotte  (29,009).  Was  champion  of  France  an  entire  season;  also 
first-prize  winner  at  Ohio  State  Fair,  1902.  ORANGISTE  was  one  of 
the  importations  by  McLaughlin  Brothers,  of  Columbus,  Ohio; 
Kansas  City,  Mo.;  and  St.  Paul,  Minn. 


SHROPSHIRE  SHEEP — Awarded  the  first  prize  or  the  best  flock 
shown  at  the  Wisconsin  State  Fair,  September,  1909.  Owned  and 
exhibited  by  A.  J.  Klein,  of  Campbellsport,  Wis. 


50 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SADDLE  STAI.LIOX — GOQDWiN,  1,22  7.  Owned  by  General 
John  B.  Castleman,  of  Louisville,  Ky.  Regarded  by  the  U.  S.  Govern- 
ment as  representing  the  highest  type  of  the  American  saddle  horse. 
GOODWIN  was  sired  by  Highland  Denmark,  130;  dam,  the  World's 
Fair  winner,  Emily,  85.5.  As  a  yearling  he  won  in  every  ring  in 
which  he  was  shown. 


ANGORA  GOAT — PRINCESS  OF  MONTEREY — Winner  of  Crold 
Medal,  American  Royal  Show,  Kansas  City,  1902.  Exhibited  by  C.  P. 
Bailey  &  Sons,  of  San  Jose,  Cali''. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


51 


■■■€ 


~.t,  i-jit^i-*' 


A  BLOCK  OF  ANGUS  BEEF— THE  ABERDEEN-ANGUS 
HEIFER  1.AY1A  OF  GLAMIS — Sweepstakes  champion  at  the  Birming- 
ham and  Smithfield  Shows,  England,  1902.  Tnis  picture  represents 
more  than  any  other  in  this  book  the  capahility  of  a  photograph  from 
life  representing  a  beef  animal.  Two  things  are  needed  to  insure 
success:  First,  the  animal;  next,  an  animal  photographer. 


GRAND  CHAMPION  POLLED-.\NGUS  STEER— SHAMROCK, 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1902.  Show-ring  weight, 
1,805  pounds  as  a  two-year-old.  )]]xhibited  by  the  Iowa  Agricultural 
College  and  fed  to  a  finish  by  Mr.  Samuel  Johnson,  herdsman. 


52 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


THE  "PERCHERON  COUNTENANCE."  This  is  a  reproduction  from 
a  photograph  of  the  original  painting  by  H.  Lang.  The  picture  is  given  a 
place  in  the  Book  of  Live  Stock  Champions  at  the  request  of  many  admirers 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


MOQUETTE— Standard-bred  Trotting  Stallion.  His  mile  at  2:10 
was  the  champion  four-year-old  record.  Remarkable  for  size,  style, 
speed,  beauty  and  ability  to  transmit  same.  Owned  by  W.  H.  Davis, 
of  Washington,  Pa. 


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AGED  HEREFORD  HERD — Champion  at  St.  Louis;  also  at 
Kansas  City,  1902.  Headed  by  March  On,  6th,  the  senior  champion 
Hereford  bull.  From  photograph  taken  at  the  St.  Louis  Fair.  Owned 
by  the  late  J.  A.  Funkhouser,  of  Plattsburg,  Mo. 


54 


THE    BOOK    OP   LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


POLLED  DURHAM  HEIFER — GOLDEN  HEATHER.  Junior 
champion  female  at  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition.  Has 
won  many  first  prizes  since  then  as  a  mature  cow.  Exhibited  by  J.  H. 
Miller,  of  Peru,  Ind.,  and  afterwards  sold  to  J.  H.  Jennings,  R.  F.  D. 
4,  Streator,  111. 


DORSET  SHEEP — Ram  in  foreground  is  WOODLAND,  239. 
First  as  ram  lamb  at  Michigan  State  Fair,  1902;  not  shown  elsewhere. 
Owned  by  Wing  Bros.,  of  Woodland  Farm,  Mechanicsburg,  Ohio. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  55 


CLYDESDALE  STALLION — EARL  OF  BOMBIE.  Winner  of 
Grand  International  Gold  Medal  for  champion  stallion,  any  age,  at 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1900.  Exhibited  by 
C.  E.  Clarke,  of  St.  Cloud,  Minn. 


RIVALS'  CHAMPIONS'  BEST,  127.963— Grand  champion  Berk- 
shire boar  at  the  Minnesota  State  Fair,  1911.  He  was  sired  by  a 
champion  boar  and  is  the  sire  of  champions.  Exhibited  by  Rockwood 
Farm,  Ames,  Iowa,  C.  F.  Curtiss,  Proprietor. 


56 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


DOUBLE    TEAM— ROBERT    J.,    record    2:01i/o.    ; 
GENTRY,  record  2:00%.     Double-team  record,  pacing,  2:[)&. 
by  Lewis  Tewkesbury,  of  New  York  state. 


GUERNSEY  COW— MARY  MARSHALL.  5,60  1.  Tlio  Avinning 
cow  in  butter  production  in  the  Pan-American  Model  Dairy  Herd, 
1901.  Record  for  six  months,  5,611.0  pounds  milk;  5.36  per  cent, 
butter-fat;  354.26  pounds  churned  butter.  Profit  in  production  of 
butter,  $59.43,  the  next  highest  being  $51.58.  Exhibited  by  Mr.  Ezra 
Michener,  of  Carversville,  Pa.,  afterwards  owned  by  A.  C.  Loring,  of 
Minneapolis,  Minn. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  57 


SIR  BEDIVERE — A  famous  chestnut  saddle  gelding  that  is  win- 
ning lots  of  blue  ribbons.  Property  of  W.  J.  Roe,  of  Oshkosh,  Wis. 
SIR  BEDIVERE  is  a  rich  chestnut  with  white  face  and  hind  feet 
white,  bred  by  E.  D.  Fryman,  of  Cynthiana,  Ky.,  and  foaled  in  1904. 
Sire,  Dandy  Jim,  2d;  dam,  Mary  Evans.  Photograph  by  Thomas  A. 
Knight,  of  Lexington,  Ky. 


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JERSEY  COW — PRIDE'S  OLGA.  4th.  96,870.  Test,  27  pounds 
Vz  ounce  from  42  0  pounds  9  ounces  of  milk.  She  is  a  daughter  of 
MEDIA  ANN'S  STOKE  POGIS,  22,042  (sire  of  ten)  and  the  great 
PRIDE'S  OLGA,  37,186,  who  has  a  test  of  19  pounds  12  ounces,  and 
leads  the  world  as  having  the  largest  number  of  tested  daughters  of 
any  Jersey  cow.     Owned  by  C.  A.  Sweet,  of  East  Aurora,  N.  Y. 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVR    STOCK    CHA^IPIONS 


SADDLE  HORSE — PRINCE  CHARMING.  Prize  winner  in  New 
York,  Atlantic  City,  Staten  Island,  Chicago,  St.  Louis,  Des  Moines  and 
Kansas  City.      Owned  by  H.  P.  Crane,  of  St.  Charles,  111. 


BROWN  SWISS  BULL— DUKE  OF  RIVER  MEADOW.  First-prize 
winner  in  class  and  champion  at  the  New  York  Pan-American  Show, 
1901.     Exhibited  by  McLaury  Bros.,  of  Portlandville.  N.  Y. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


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SADDLE  MARE — CORTNNE.  An  Eastern  show-ring  champion 
of  1904.  Then  owned  by  Mrs.  J.  M.  B.  Grosvenor,  a  lady  exhibitor 
who  had  a  very  fine  collection  of  show  horses. 


JERSEY  BULL — GOLDEN  MON  PLAISIR,  59,936.  Winner  of 
first  prize  over  ISLAND  OF  JERSEY,  1898;  also  champion  iu  the 
United  States.     Owned  by  H.  N.  Hl§ginbotham,  of  Joliet,  111. 


60  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


'y%^4>d;^teaMa<.«>i.. 


THOROUGHBRED   HIJXTER — (iARNET   RIPPLE.    -MuKiie-weight 
champion  of  1904.     Owned  by  Courtland  H.  Smith,  of  Alexandria,  Va. 


CHEVIOT  SHEEP — Ased 
Fairs  and  St.  Louis  in  19  02. 
castle,  Ind. 


am.      First-prize  winner  at  three  State 
Exhibited   by  F.   B.  Hartman,  of  Fin- 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIA^E    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  61 


SHORTHORN  BULL— MERRY  HAMPTON.  Purchased  by  the 
University  of  Illinois  to  head  the  College  Shorthorn  herd.  At  four 
years  old  this  grand  bull  weighed  2,400  pounds.  He  was  a  champion 
in  Scotland,  and  has  not  been  shown  in  this  country,  although  consid- 
ered one  of  the  greatest  living  Shorthorn  bulls. 


AYRSHIRE  COW — VIOLA  DRUMMOND.  First-prize  aged  cow, 
Pan-American  Show,  Buffalo,  1901.  Exhibited  by  J.  F.  Converse  & 
Co.,  of  Woodville,  N.  Y. 


62  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


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CLYDESDALE  FILLY— LADY  ELEGANT.  Three  years  old. 
Champion  female  at  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition, 
1904.     Bred  and  owned  by  McLay  Bros.,  of  Janesville,  Wis. 


JERSEY  BULL-  CZAR  OF  Rl VERMEADOW.  Owned  by  F.  E. 
Dawley,  of  Dotshome,  Fayetteville,  N.  Y.  Winner  of  thirty-one  first 
prizes  in  the  Eastern  and  Middle  States,  including  championship  at 
New  York,  Pennsylvania,  and  Trenton,  N.  J.  Never  beaten  in  the 
show  ring. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


63 


DUROC-JERSEY  SOW — AS  A  YEARLING.  Weight,  700  pounds. 
St.  Louis  Fair  sweepstakes  winner.  Exhibited  by  O.  Walter  &  Son,  of 
Lebanon,  Ohio. 


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niPORTED  YEARLING  OXFORD  DOWN  RAM.  Exhibited  and 
ownad  by  G.  McKerrow  &  Sons,  of  Pewaukee,  Wis.  First-prize  winner 
and  champion  at  Missouri,  Iowa,  Minnesota,  Wisconsin,  Indiana,  Illi- 
nois and  Kentucky  State  Fairs,  also  at  the  Great  St.  Louis  Fair,  and  at 
the  American  Royal  Show  of  1903. 


64  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SUFFULK  STaLLIUX  -  IIEXDLESIJAAI  ALBERT.  Champion 
of  the  hreed  at  Chicago  International  Live  Stoclt  Exposition,  1902. 
Imported  and  owned  by  Alex.  Galbraith  &  Son,  of  Janesville,  Wis. 


SADDLE  STALLION— ROSE  WHIRLWIND.  Three  years  old. 
First  prize  at  Illinois  State  Fair,  1902;  also  at  Paris  and  three  other 
Fairs  in  Missouri.     Owned  jay  Ed.  Hodgson,  of  El  Paso,  111. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


65 


SHETLAND  PONY  STALLION— CHESTNUT,  3,572.  Foaled 
1897.  Height,  41  inches.  First-prize  winner  at  many  State  Fairs 
and  Horse  Shows.  Picture  taken  at  Chicago  International  Live  Stock 
Exposition  of  1909,  after  winning  the  Gold  Medal  offered  by  the 
American  Shetland  Pony  Club. 


TAMWORTH  SOW — PRUDALIA,  119,  A.  T.  R.  First  in  class 
and  sweepstakes  sow,  Illinois  State  Fair,  1898.  Photographed  at 
three  years.     Owned  by  J.  M.  Simpson  &  Sons,  of  Palmer,  111. 


fi6 


THE    BOOK     OF    LIVE    STOCK     CHAMPIONS. 


IMP.  VILLAGE  BELLE,  2d — Champion  Shorthorn  cow  at 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1902;  American  Royal, 
1903;  Chicago  International,  1903;  also  other  chami)ionships  too 
nnmerous  to  mention.  This  picture  was  taken  in  the  snow  at 
Chicago  during  the  show  of  1902.  Owned  and  exhibited  by  D.  R. 
Hanna,  of  Ravenna,  Ohio. 


HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN  COW — MERCEDES  JULIPS  PIETERJE, 
3  9,4  80.  Record  of  5  84  pounds  of  milk  in  seven  days,  official  test, 
containing  29  pounds  .5.7  ounces  of  butter.  Claiming  world's  record. 
1901-2.  Owned  bv  McAdam  &  Von  Heyne,  Brothertown  Stock  Farms, 
Deansboro,  N.  Y.,  and  afterwards  sold  to  Dr.  W.  T.  Housinger,  of  West 
Chazy,  N.  Y. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS 


KING  ALAR,  26,552 — Owned  by  Miss  A.  A.  Marks,  of  Sound 
Beach,  Conn.  KING  ALAR  is  17  hands  high;  weighs  1,450  pounds, 
and  has  a  mark  of  2:26  as  a  fouryear-old.  He  is  the  fastest  large 
horse  and  can  trot  a  mile  at  2:20  at  any  time  without  any  boots.  His 
disposition  is  kind  and  gentle,  and  he  is  a  rare  specimen  of  the 
American  trotter,  combining  speed,  size  and  power. 


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BRAHMA  COW — Tnis  is  a  picture  of  a  fine  representation  of  the 
Brahma  or  Zebu  breed  of  East  Indian  cattle,  being  one  of  an  American 
impoi'tation  and  champion  in  her  class. 


68 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


KEX  i\lcDONAL,u,  H'6'6 — BlacK  Stallion,  sixteen  nands  high. 
Champion  saddle  horse  of  America.  Foaled  1890.  Bred  by  Joseph 
McDonald,  of  Mexico,  Mo.  Sire.  Rex  Denmark.  84  0;  dam,  Lucy 
Mack.  Picture  taken  at  thirteen  years  old.  This  horse  won  cham- 
pionship ribbons  without  limit  and  was  finally  barred  from  contests. 
In  the  zenith  of  his  career  he  wa?  owned  and  shown  by  Colonel  Jno. 
T.Hughes, of  Muir,Ky.  In  his  old  age,  by  B.R.Middleton,  of  Mexico,  Mo. 


HEREFORD  BULL— IMP.  SALISBURY,  76,059.  Sweepstakes 
winner  at  the  Ohio  State  Fair;  also  at  West  Virginia  and  Maryland, 
1898.  At  head  of  Castalia  Herefords,  Murray  Boocock,  Proprietor, 
Keswick,  Albemarle  county,  V^. 


THE   BOOK   OF   LIVE   STOCK   CHAMPIONS. 


69 


GERMAN  COACH  STAL.L10N — HANNltiAi.,  ^,iJ..  A^ed  six 
years.  First-prize  winner  at  New  York,  Illinois  and  Indiana  State 
Fairs,  and  champion  prize  winner  over  all  coach  hreeds  at  the  Amer- 
ican Royal  Show,  1903;  champion  at  Chicago  International,  1903. 
Owned  by  J.  Crouch  &  Son,  of  Lafayette,  Ind.,  and  Sedalia,  Mo. 
HANNIBAL  was  also  grand  champion  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase 
Exposition,  1904. 


POLLED  DURHA:M  CATTLE — Champion  bull  and  cow.  Polled 
Durhams  are  Shorthorn  cattle  with  the  horns  bred  out.  This  pair  is 
highly  representative  of  the  breed,  and  the  picture  is  published  in 
order  to  show  the  foundation  upon  wljich  profitable  young  market 
catUe  can  be  produced. 


70  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


HEREFOJ;i>  i;i|,l,  I.MI-|;(J^-|-:K  il'.t.L'nr,),  iM/ii'n,  nnv.  .l..-a>>Ml 
He  was  bred  by  J.  H.  Arkwright,  Esq.,  Hampton  Court,  Leoniinsler, 
England,  and  imported  by  T.  F.  B.  Sotham.  of  Chillicothe,  Mo.,  to  head 
his  herd.  This  great  bull  at  three  years  old  weighed  2,000  pounds. 
He  was  believed  to  be  the  deejiest-bodied  and  shortest-legged  bull  in 
the  world.  IMPROVER  was  a  grand  show  animal  from  the  start,  and 
in  several  instances  was  first  in  class,  first  in  herd  or  champion  aged 
bull  at  State  Fairs,  and  first  in  class  at  the  Chicago  International  Live 
Stock  Exposition  of  1901.  By  reason  of  mistaken  patriotism  this  bull 
was  sent  for  exhibit  at  the  South  Carolina  Exposition,  and  died  from 
fever  contracted  there. 


AYRSHIRE  COW — CLARA  GLADYS.  Seven  years  old.  Cham- 
pion cow  of  the  breed  at  St.  Louis,  1903,  and  winner  of  many  other 
premiums.     Owned  by  W.  P.  Schanck,  of  Avon,  N.  Y. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


RYSDICK'S  HAMBLETONIAN— SIRE  OP  TROTTERS.  Picture 
taken  in  his  old  ag:e.  From  copyright  ohotosraph  by  permission  of 
Schreiber  &  Sons,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa.  RYSDICK'S  HAMBLETONIAN 
was  never  trained.  In  1864,  when  he  was  fifteen  years  old,  David 
Bonner  drove  him  at  a  2:30  to  2:40  gaii.  When  he  was  foaled  in 
1849,  the  mile  record,  2: 291/2,  was  held  by  Lady  Suffolk.  It  was 
nineteen  years  afterwards  when  the  first  2:10  record  was  made.  He 
was  151/^  hands  high,  dark  bay,  with  both  hind  ankles  white. 


SUFFOLK  SHEEP — PEN  OF  WETHERS.  Winners  of  sweep- 
stakes at  the  Scottish  National  Show;  also  at  Smithfield,  London, 
England,  1902.  At  twenty-one  months  these  wethers  weighed  a  total 
of  928  pounds.      Exhibited  by  Colonel  Baird,  of  Newmarket. 


72 


THE    BOOK    OP    LTVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


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SHIRE  MARE — BEAUTY,  6,013.  Champion  Shire  mare,  any 
age,  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  I'JOl.  Exhibited  by 
L.  W.  Cochran,  of  Crawfordsville,  Ind. 


A  FAMOUS  C.M^  OP  FIRST-PRIZE  TWO-YEAR-OLDS,  S.  W. 
District,  at  the  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1902.  Fed  and 
exhibited  by  John  Keister,  of  Emery,  111. 


THE    BOOK    OF    L[VE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  73 


POLLED  DURHAM  HEIFER — RUBY  OF  BUTTOXWOOD.  Owned 
by  Fletcher  S.  Hines,  of  Malott  Park,  Ind.  Has  always  taken  the 
blue  ribbon  wherever  shown.  Junior  champion  at  Chicago  Interna- 
tional Live  Stock  Exposition,  1901,  and  senior  champion  also  at 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1902;  also  senior  cham- 
pion cow,  Chicago,  1903.  Later,  since  grown  to  maturity,  RUBY  OF 
BUTTONWOOD  was  grand  champion  at  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposi- 
tion, 1904. 


RUBERTA — CHAMPION  SHORTHORN  COW  OF  1902.  1903  AND 
1904.  Bred  by  J.  G.  Bobbins  &  Sons,  of  Horace,  Ind.,  and  owned  by 
G.  M.  Casey,  of  Clinton,  Mo.  This  is  one  of  the  early  pictures  of 
RUBERTA  taken  in  1902  at  the  Great  St.  Louis  Fair. 


thf:  book   of  livk  stock   ohampions. 


IMPORTED  PERCHERON  STALLION — LOUFOC,  44,948.  Aged 
four  years.  Weight,  2,100  pounds.  First-prize  winner  at  the  Indiana 
State    Fair.      Owned    by    J.    Crouch    &    Son,    of    Lafayette,    Ind. 


HEREFORD  STEER  CALVES — Bred  and  shown  by  Swenson 
Bros.,  of  Stamford,  Texas.  First  in  class  for  feeders  under  one  year 
old  in  Southwest  District,  International  Live  Stocli  Exposition  of  1902. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


75 


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76 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SHORTHORN  BULL  —  CEREMONIOUS  ARCHER,  171,479. 
Junior  champion  Shorthorn  bull  (yearling)  at  the  Chicago  Interna- 
tional Live  Stock  Exposition,  1002.  Exhibited  by  George  Harding  & 
Son,  of  Waukesha,  Wis.  This  bull  wins  great  honors  in  the  year 
1903,  and  will  be  found  again  in  this  Book  of  Live  Stock  Champions. 


COTSW'OI.l)  SlIKKP — AGED  RAM.  Champion  at  St.  Louis,  New 
York,  Michigan  and  other  Fairs.  Exhibited  by  Lewis  Bros.,  of  Camp 
Point,  111. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


A  CLYDESDALE  STALLION— WOODEND  GARTLY.  Champion 
at  Stirling,  Scotland,  and  winner  of  other  great  prizes.  Imported  and 
owned  by  Alex.  Galbraith  &  Son,  of  Janesville,  Wis. 


POLLED  DURHAM  HEIFER— RUBY  OF  BUTTONWOOD,  2d,  AS 
A  YEARLING.  Owned  by  Fletcher  S  Hines,  of  Mallott  Park,  Ind. 
First  in  class  at  all  the  State  Fairs,  1902,  and  junior  champion  at  the 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1902.  At  the  Louisiana 
Purchase  Exposition,  as  a  full-grown  cow,  she  was  only  second  to  her 
half-sister,  who  was  a  grand  champion  female  of  the  show. 


78 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


A    THOROUGHBRED    HORSE — ROBERT    WADDELL.      Winner 
of  the  American  Derby  of  1901. 


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GUERNSEY  COW — SWEET  BRIAR  OP  LINDEN  HOME,  9,681, 
A.  G.  C.  C.  First-prize  and  champion  cow,  special  Guernsey  exhibit, 
Wisconsin  State  Fair,  1901.  Property  of  Charles  Solveson,  of  Nash- 
otah,  Wis. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


80 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SHORTHORN  BULL— LAVENDER  VISCOUNT.  Champion  Short- 
horn bull,  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1904.  Exhib- 
ited by  Chas.  E.  Leonard,  of  Bell  Air,  Mo.  This  great  bull  was  photo- 
graphed at  Chicago  on  a  dull,  snowy  day,  and  is  the  best  picture 
obtainable.  Speaking  of  this  great  bull,  the  Breeders'  Gazette  said: 
"Twice  champion  in  the  West,  LAVENDER  VISCOUNT  transfers  the 
scene  of  his  victories  east  of  the  river.  Nothing  can  be  added  to  the 
account  of  the  career  of  this  remarkable  flesh  carrier  save  the  cham- 
pionship record  achieved  here  over  the  pick  of  the  bulls  of  America 
and  Britain." 


VJCTORI.V  UUAll  Fiibt  iu  rlass  ..l 
600  pounds  when  exhibited  as  a  yearling. 
Dyer,  Ind. 


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Owned  by  Davis  Bros.,  of 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  81 


BELGIAN  DRAFT  MARE- -BRILLl ANTE,  117.  Champion  Bel- 
gian mare,  any  age.  at  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition, 
1901.      Exhibited  by  H.  Lefebure,  of  Fairfax,  Iowa. 

Nearly  every  picture  appearing  in  THE  BOOK  OF  LIVE  STOCK 
CHAMPIONS  has  at  some  time  or  other  appeared  in  THE  NATIONAL 
P^ARMER  AND  STOCK  GROWER,  published  monthly  at  St.  Louis,  Mo. 


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LINCOLN  SHEEP — A  prize-winning  flock  at  the  Great  St.  Louis 
Fair,  1902.     Exhibited  by  J.  T.  Gibson,  of  Denfleld,  Ontario,  Canada. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPION'S. 


GUERNSEY  BULL — COCK  OF  THE  WALK.  First-prize  winner 
and  champion  at  New  York  State  Fair,  1902.  Owned  by  Edward  T. 
Price,  Spotswood  Dairy  Farms  (Walter  Jauncey,  Manager),  Broad 
Axe,  Pa. 


THE  ANGOR.A  (iOAT  — LAZ.\RUS.  Cliampion  of  the  First 
Kansas  City  Royal  Show,  1900.  Exhibited  by  D.  C  Taylor,  of  New 
Mexico,  and  sold  to  Richardson  Bros.,  of  Dubuque,  Iowa. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  83 


HEREFORD  STEER— 'THE  WOODS  PRINCIPAL."  Champion 
calf  at  International  Fat  Stock  Show,  1900.  and  grand  champion  steer 
of  the  same  show  of  1901.  Exhibited  by  George  P.  Henry,  of  Goode- 
now,  111.,  and  fed  by  John  Letham.  Weighed  1,64.5  pounds  at  twenty- 
five  months. 


AYRSHIRE   COW — IMISS    OLLIE,  12,039.      Bred   and   owned   by 

L.   S.  Drew,  of  South  Burlington,  Vt.  Won  first  in  home  dairy  test 

for  single  cow,  giving  official  record  of  9,924  pounds  of  milk  and  .514 
pounds  of  butter  in  one  year. 


84 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


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TROTTING  SIRE— JAY  BIRD,  2:31%,  by  George  Wilkes,  2:22. 
Foaled  in  1877.  Sire  of  Hawthorne,  2:06%;  Allerton,  2:09%:;  Early 
Bird,  2:10;  Invader,  2:10;  also  many  more  with  records  from 
2:11  to  2:hj.  Copyright  photograph  by  permission  of  Sthreiber  & 
Sons,  of  Philadelphia. 


POLAND-CHINA  BOAR — Two  years  old.     Champion  at  St.Louis, 
1902.     Exhibited  by  Burgess  Bros.,  of  Beraent,  111. 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


85 


A  FAMOUS  JACK — MONARCH,  190.  Winner  of  first  premium 
in  two-year-old  ring,  World's  Columbian  Exposition,  Chicago,  1893. 
Exhibited  by  Charles  G.  Comstock,  of  Albany,  Mo. 


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CAR-LOAD  OF  YEARLING  HEREFORD  CATTLE — First-prize 
winners  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1902. 
Bred,  raised  and  fed  by  W.  F.  Herrin,  of  Buffalo,  111.,  weighing  an 
average  of  1,093  pounds  in  market  and  sold  at  $7.60  per  100  pounds. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


P\\:M01'S  jack  day  S1\\K,  lM,  lmU.  Took  the  iinMiiiuin  at 
the  Chicago  World's  Fair,  ISf).''.,  as  best  in  his  class.  Bred  and  owned 
by  J.  W.  &  J.  L.  Jones,  Jr.,  of  Columbia,  Maury  county,  Teijn. 


LINCOLN  SHEEP — Champion  ram,  any  age,  at  the  Chicago 
International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1901.  Exhibited  by  J.  H. 
Patrick,  of  Ilderton,  Canada. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


87 


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88 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CtlAMPIONS. 


SHORTHORN  BULL — NONPAREIL  OF  CLOVER  BLOSSOM, 
153,672.  Junior  champion  male  at  Chicago  International  Live  Stock 
Exposition,  1901.  Exhibited  by  George  Both  well,  of  Nettleton,  Mo. 
Since  sold  to  D.  R.  Hanna,  of  Ravenna,  Ohio.  The  contest  in  which  this 
great  bull  was  declared  junior  champion  was  considered  especially- 
great  and  interesting.  NONPAREIL  OF  CLOVER  BLOSSOM  had 
beaten  all  American  Shorthorn  yearlings  in  the  show  ring  and  was  in 
competition  with  a  bull  w'^'  -h  had  beaten  all  the  yearlings  of  England. 


in  11  II  ii\'.i.ii'A)  LULL. — L  i..i-liDIUS,  324.  As  four-year-old 
weighed  1,680  pounds.  Owned  by  Mrs.  S.  A.  F.  Servin,  of  Valley 
Farm,  Warwick,  N.  Y.  Was  shown  in  1S97,  1898  and  1901  at  leading 
Fairs,  including  New  York  State  (Syracuse),  New  Jersey  Interstate 
(Trenton,  N.  J.),  and  Pan-American,  and  out  of  seventeen  first  prizes 
he  took  thirteen  in  1901.  He  headed  the  herd  and  took  first  at  all 
Fairs  shown.  He  also  took  sweepstakes  at  New  York  State  (Syra- 
cuse), in  1901. 


THE    BOOK    OF    T.IVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


|t 


CLEAR  LAKE  JUTE — The  grand  champion  beef  steer  at  the 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition  Oi  1904.  This  steer  was 
fed  and  exhibited  under  the  direction  of  Andrew  Boss,  Chief  of  the 
Live  Stock  Department  of  the  Minnesota  Agricultural  Experiment 
Station.  The  steer  was  handled  and  cared  for  by  George  Craig, 
herdsman  and  graduate  of  the  college.  At  fourteen  months  old  his 
weight  was  estimated  at  1,050  pounds;  at  twenty-six  months,  as 
reserve  champion,  his  official  weight  v/as  1,624  pounds:  at  thirty- 
eight  months,  as  grand  champion,  his  weight  was  1,89.5  pounds;  and 
when  sold  he  weighed  1,870  pounds.  CLEAR  LAKE  JUTE  dressed 
69  per  cent,  of  clear  beef;  furnished  123  pounds  of  fat,  and  the  hide 
weighed  95  pounds.  CLEAR  LAKE  JUTE  was  sold  by  the  Bowles 
Live  Stock  Commission  Company  at  3  6  cents  per  pound  to  the  United 
Dressed  Beef  Company  of  New  York.  The  verdict  of  the  slaughterers 
in  regard  to  this  steer  is,   that  it  was  the  Champion  of  Champions. 


DUROC-JERSEY  BOAR — Champion  two-year-old,  St.  Louis  Fair, 
1902.     Exhibited  by  O.  Walter  &  Son,  of  Lebanon,  Ohio. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


HOLSTEIN-FRTESTAX  COW— DTJCHESS  ORINISBY,  2d.  Owned 
by  A.  N.  McGeoch.  of  Lake  Mills,  "Wis.  Record  in  six-year-old  form, 
409.8  pounds  of  milk  and  21  pounds  .'.  ounces  of  butter. 


AMERICAN  MERINO  RAM — First-prize  winner  and  champion 
for  years  at  State  Fairs  and  at  St.  Louis.  Grows  a  fleece  weighing  28 
pounds.     Exhibited  by  C,  H.  Bell,  of  Ashley,  Ohio. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPTONS. 


91 


NANCY  HANKS — THRICE  CROWNED  CHAMPION  TROTTING 
MARE.  Reduced  the  mile  record  414  seconds  in  forty-one  days. 
September  28,  1892,  she  trotted  a  mile  in  2:04.  From  copyright  pho- 
tograph by  courtesy  of  Schreiber  &  Sons,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa.  See 
another  picture  of  NANCY  HANKS  on  page  98. 


DEVON  BULL — TULIP'S  ROYAL.  1st.  Exhibited  by  James 
Hilton  &  Son,  of  New  Scotland,  N.  Y.  First-prize  winner  in  t\vo-yea,v- 
Qld  class  and  sweepstakes  bull  at  Pan-American,  1901. 


92 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


BELGIAN  STALLION — OMER.  Champion  at  Chicago  Interna- 
tional Live  Stock  Exposition,  1903.  "A  clean  winner."  Exhibited  by 
]\IcLaiighlin  Bros.,  of  Columbus,  Ohio,  and  Kansas  City,  Mo. 


DUTCH  BELTED  COW— ECHO,  2d,  701.  Won  first  prize  and 
championship  at  South  Carolina  Interstate  and  West  Indian  Exposi- 
tion, first  and  sweepstakes  at  New  Hampshire  State  Fair,  first  and 
champion  New  York  State  Fair,  first  at  Indiana  State  Fair,  champion 
dairy  cow,  any  breed,  Batavia,  N.  Y.,  Jerseys,  Ayrshires  and  Guernseys 
competing,  first  prize  New  Jersey  Interstate  Fair.  She  was  never 
beaten  in  the  show  ring.  Owned  by  Frank  R.  Sanders,  of  Wayback 
Farm,  Laconia,  N.  H. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


93 


BELLINI,  2:1314 — Trotting  stallion  by  Artillery,  2:  21 1/2,  sou  of 
Hambletonian,  10.  Very  successful  trotter.  Owned  by  W.  H.  Dicker- 
man,  of  Mamaroneck,  N.  Y.  Sire  of  The  Judge,  2:10i4;  Alberto, 
2:131/^;  and  many  other  standard  performers. 


HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN  BULL — COUNT  PAUL  DE  KOL,  2d. 
First-prize  winner  at  Pan-American  Exposition,  1901.  Exhibited  by 
Highlaw»   Farm,  Worcester,   M^ss.     Owned  by  Mr.   F.   P.    Knowie?. 


94  thp:  book  of  live  stock  champions. 


McKUSICK  —  CREAT      PRIZE-WINNING      HARNESS      HORSE. 
Owned  bj'  G.  Hutchinson  Gallony,  of  Devan,  Pa. 


HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN  CHAMPION  COW— SADIE  VALE  CON- 
CORDIA, A.  R.  O.,  1,124.  Producing  under  official  test  694.3  pounds 
of  milk  in  seven  days,  containing  ?,Q  pounds  10.10  ounces  of  butter: 
also  producing  in  thirty  days  2.7.52.6  jjounds  of  milk,  containing  12Ii 
10  ounces  of  butter,  breaking  world's  record  in  both  tests.  Owned  by 
Mc.\dam  &  Von  Heyne,  of  Brothertown  Stock  Farms,  Deausboro, 
Oneida  county,  N.  Y. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


95 


JIM   CROAV — CHAMPION   MIDDLE-WEIGHT    HrXTEK,      Owned 
by  Mr.  .1.  R.  Valentine,  of  Brj-n  Mawr,  Fa. 


CHAMPION  GRADE  WETHER  LAMB,  Chicago,  1902.  An 
example  of  what  a  fat  lamb  ought  to  be.  Exhibited  by  R.  Gibson,  of 
Delaware,  Ontario,  Canada. 


96 


THE    BOOK    OF    LTVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


GOLDSMITH  S  MAID — Famous  Trotting  Queen,  reduced  the  mile 
record  to  2:14  on  September  2d,  1874.  From  copyright  photograph 
by  courtesy  of  Schreiber  &  Sons,  Art  Photographers,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


Anyone  who  desires  to  look  over  a  first-class  monthly  farm  paper 
should  obtain  a  copy  of  THE  NATIONAL  FARMER  AND  STOCK 
GROWER,  published  monthly  at  3  550  Vista  .Ave.,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 
This  BOOK  OF  LIVE  STOCK  CHAMPIONS  is  a  souvenir  of  that  paper. 


^.'.^m^'  .^ 


ABERDE1::X  ...><.  L  o  Caj  , ,  .l,1.1:TIIA  OF  MEADOWLRUOK. 
First  aged  cow  and  champion,  Pan-American  Exposition,  1901. 
Exhibited  by  D.  Bradfute  &  Son,  of  Cedarville,  Ohio. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


97 


ALLIE  NLJN^ 
in  roadster  class. 


-Winner  of  forty-three  first  and  championship  prizes 
Owned  by  E.  T.  Stotesbury,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


AYRSHIRE  COW— PINK  DAISY,  14,320.  Representative  Ayr- 
shire cow.  Shown  at  Ohio  State  Fair  as  a  two-year-old  and  won  first 
premium.  Was  also  in  first-prize  herd  as  get  of  one  sire.  Owned  by 
Mr.  Howard  Cook,  of  Ayrshire  Stock  Farm,  Beloit,  Ohio. 


98  THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


NANCY    HANKS    IN   RETIRE:\IENT— THE    BROOD    MARE. 


RAMBOUILLET  SHEEl'— Lliciiii,-iuii  ,  wt.,  ai.,  d^e,  CliicaMu  Inter- 
national Live  Stoclc  Exposition,  1901.  Exhibited  by  Max  Chapman, 
of  Marysville,  Ohio. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


ALH]XAX1)K11  liAKKWH^LL—CHAMPlON  CLYDESDALE  STAL- 
LION AT  THE  ILLINOIS  STATE  FAIR  OF  1909.  He  is  a  massive 
dark-brown  horse,  easily  weighing  2,000  pounds.  Exhibited  by  Alex. 
Galbraith  &  Son,  of  DeKalb,  111. 


SIR  BOURBON — KENTUCKY  SADDLE  YEARLING.  First- 
prize  winner  at  the  Kentucky  State  Fair.  Exhibited  by  Weissinger  & 
Sons,  Undulata  Stock  Farm,  Shelbyville,  Ky.  Photograph  by  Thps.  A- 
Kuight  <&  Co.,  of  Lexington,  Ky. 


100 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


KESWICK— CHAIMPION 
conformation  of  hunter  type. 


LIGHT-WEIGHT     HUNTER,     showing 
Owned  by  Julian  Morris,  Keswick,  Va. 


BARON  DUKE,  62d,  1.54,052 — Photograph  taken  at  Missouri 
State  Fair,  1911,  where  he  was  grand  champion  Berkshire  boar.  At 
the  Fair  his  age  was  less  than  one  year  and  his  weight  was  500 
pouAds.     Bred  and  exhibited  by  N.  H.  Gentry  &  Son,  Sedalia,  Mo. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  101 


AMERICAN  STARLIGHT— Registered  No.  3,253  in  American 
Jack  Stock  Stud  Book.  AMERICAN  STARLIGHT  is  four  years  old, 
15  Vz  hands  high,  beautiful  black  with  white  points,  extra  fine  head 
with  thirty-six-inch  ears  from  tip  to  tip.  Weight,  1,100  pounds,  large 
foot  and  bone  and  a  wonderful  breeder.  AMERICAN  STARLIGHT 
was  champion  jack  at  Columbia,  Tenn.,  September,  1911.  Property 
of  Thos.  H.  Ezell,  owner  of  Mill  Creek  Stock  Farm,  Nashville,  Tenn. 


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WHITE  MARY,  r,th— CHAMPION  LARGE  YORKSHIRE  SOW. 
Bred,  owned  and  exhibited  by  B.  F.  Davidson,  of  Menlo,  Iowa.  ShQ 
weighed  640  pounds  and  was  champion  at  four  State  Fairg. 


1  02 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


BRADGATE  BLUE  JACKET— SHIRE  STALLION.  Imporled  and 
exhibited  by  Trumans'  Pioneer  Stud  Farm,  Bushnell,  HI.  BRADGATE 
BLUE  JACKET  as  a  two-year-old  weighed  1,900  pounds;  has  the  very 
best  of  style  and  action;  stands  on  large,  sound  feet,  with  best  of  legs 
and  joints.  He  was  shown  at  tbe  great  London  Shire  Horse  Show,  and 
in  a  class  of  102  shown  he  stood  fourteenth,  which  was  inside  the 
ribbons.  He  is  a  beautiful  grey,  and  has  started  out  well  since 
arriving  on  this  side  by  having  won  first  at  the  Iowa  State  Fair  and 
first  at  the  Illinois  State  Fair. 


HEREFORD  CATTLE — First-prize  winners  and  champions  of  the 
herd  of  Luce  &  Moxley,  of  Shelbyville,  Ky.  Photographed  by  Knight, 
Qf  Lexington. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


103 


CHAMPION  SHORTHORN  STEER  AT  AMERICAN  ROYAL 
SHOW  OF  1911.  Grown  and  exhibited  by  Tliompson  Bros.,  of  Dover, 
Kansas.  Sold  by  the  firm  of  Clay,  Robinson  &  Co.  at  $9.30  per  100 
pounds  to  Cudahy  Packing  Company. 


A  PAIR  OF  SHORTHORNS— SULTAN  MINE,  BULL,  AND  NON- 
PAREIL, 44th,  COW.  Exhibited  by  F.  W.  Harding,  Waukesha,  Wis. 
Champions  at  Wisconsin  State  Fair  of  1911. 


104 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SADDLE  STALLION — DANDY  JIM,  2d.  Winner  of  five-gaited 
championship  at  Kentucky  Blue  Grass  Fair.  Exhibited  by  M.  D. 
Martin,  of  Poindexter,  Ky.  DANDY  JIM,  2d,  was  sired  by  McDonald 
Chief,  1,451,  by  Rex  McDonald,  8S3;  dam  Lady  Mc,  1,604,  by  Indian 
Chief,  Jr.  This  great  saddle  horse  has  a  blaze  face  and  left  fore  and 
right  hind  foot  white.  From  photograph  by  Thos.  A.  Knight  &  Co., 
Photographers,  Lexington,  Ky. 


PETER  STERLING! — ABERDEEN-ANGUS  BULL.  Picture  taken 
at  the  Sioux  City  Interstate  Fair,  where  he  was  first-prize  winner  in 
class  for  two-year-olds.  PETER  STERLING  was  also  first  in  class 
and  reserve  senior  champion  bull  at  the  American  Royal  Show.  Exhib- 
ited by  A.  C.  Binnie  &  Son,  of  Alta,  Iowa. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


105 


The  picture  preseuiu.l  hLiu.vUh  is  of  ANDY,  a  champion  Aber- 
deen-Angus steer,  classing  as  the  best  on  any  market.  He  was  fed. 
and  exhibited  by  the  Iowa  Agricultural  College  and  narrowly  escaped 
the  grand  championship  award  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock 
Exposition. 


SILVER  SECRET— POLLED  DURHAM  BULL.  Age,  January 
4th,  1910,  photo  as  junior  yearling.  First-prize  winner  and  reaching 
junior  championship  honors  in  State  Fair  Circuit  of  1911.  Owned 
and  exhibited  by  J.  H.  Miller,  Peru,  Ind. 


THR    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


A  FIRST-CLASS  LOAD  OF  HEAVY  HOGS.  These  hogs  were 
marketed  by  S.  C.  Savior,  of  Oakwood,  111.,  a  prominent  stockman  of 
Vermilion  county,  near  the  Indiana  line,  and  were  shipped  to  the 
Buffalo  market,  where  they  were  sold  at  $9.65  per  100  pounds  by 
Clay,  Robinson  &  Co.  to  the  Jacob  Dold  Packing  Company. 


SOPHIE,  19th,  OF  HOOD  FARM,  189,748— WORLD'S  CHAM- 
PION. Yearly  authenticated  test  Jersey  cow,  tour  to  five  years  old. 
14,373  pounds  3  ounces  of  milk  testing  1,005  pounds  of  butter  in  one 
year.     Owned  and  tested  at  Hood  Farm,  Lowell,  Mass. 


THE    BOOK    OF   LIVE3    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


107 


MAZEJMOOR  HAROLD — CHAMPION  SHIRE  STALLION  AT  THE 
INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION  OF  1908.  Imported 
and  exhibited  by  Trumans'  Pioneer  Stud  Farm,  Bushnell,  111.  There 
were  fifty-two  Shire  stallions  shown  at  the  Chicago  International,  and 
this  one  was  the  best. 


CHAMPION  SHROPSHIRE  RAM  at  Ohio,  Indiana,  New  York  and 
Michigan  State  Fairs  of  1911.  Sold  for  $600,  the  record  price  for  a 
sheep  of  the  English  mutton  breeds.  Owned  and  exhibited  by  Geo. 
McKerrow  &  Son,  Pewaukee,  "Wi8. 


108  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


CHIEFTAIN  AND  :\IATE  Owned  and  exhibited  by  J.  W.  Harri- 
man  at  Horse  Shows  in  the  East.  A  team  tliat  has  won  a  fair  share 
of  championship  .prizes. 


MY  CHOICE — ABERDEEN-ANGUS  STEER.  Champion  fat  steer 
at  the  Iowa  and  Nebraska  State  Fairs  of  1909;  also  champion  grade 
Aberdeen-Angus  steer  at  the  American  Royal  Show.  MY  CHOICE  is 
a  two-year-old.     Exhibited  by  W.  J.  Miller,  of  Newton,  Iowa. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


109 


HAUTBOIS  (74,U26),  44.3S2  -PERCIIEUOX  STALLION.  Foaled 
April,  1907.  First-prize  winner  Ohio  State  Fair,  1911,  First  prize  in 
class,  reserve  champion  and  championship  cup,  Chicago  International 
Live  Stock  Exposition,  1911.  Winner  of  first  prize,  championship  and 
Vanderbilt  Cuj),  .NIational  Horse  Show,  1911.  Imported  and  owned  by 
McLaughlin  Bros.,  Columbus,  Ohio. 


GRAND  CHAMPION  CAR-LOAD  OF  BEEF  CATTLE  AT  THE 
NINTH  INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION,  DECEMBER, 
1908.  These  cattle  were  two-year-old  Aberdeen-Angus  steers,  aver- 
aging 1,400  pounds  in  market.  In  the  show  ring  they  won  $625,  and 
were  sold  at  11  cents  a  pound  to  the  United  Dressed  Beef  Company,  of 
New  York  City.  They  were  fed  by  Funk  Bros.  Seed  Company,  of 
Bloomington,  111. 


110 


THE    BOOK    OF    T.TVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


ADVANCE  d'Alih  STA  N  !  ).\  |;  l  )-| ;  i;  i:i »  SHOW"  STAT.LTON, 
BREEDING  FOR  COACH  ilOll-^lO  'I  ^  i'lv  Ih  lias  Ixm  n  inoiiouiiced  by 
good  judges  to  be  one  of  the  greatest  show  stallions  in  America.  He 
produces  his  type  in  his  colts  to  a  remarkable  degree  and  breeds  colts 
of  good  size.  Winner  of  many  prizes,  including  first  in  runabout  class 
and  first  in  championship  stallion  class  for  stallions  under  15.1, 
Chicago  Horse  Show,  1909.  Property  of  A.  T.  Cole,  Gretna  Farm, 
Wheaton,  111. 


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R  IXC  MASTER  — -  ILLUSTRIOUS  SHORT  I 
champion  of  the  breed  at  Missouri  State  Fair, 
graph  was  taken.  RINGMASTER  was  then 
grand    championships.       Bred    and    owned    by 


lOU.X  IM'LL.  Grand 
Ut  1  1 ,  when  the  photo- 
winner  of  twenty-six 
White    &    Smith,    St. 


Cloud,  Minn.     RINGMASTER  was  grand  champion  of  the  breed  at  the 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1910  and  1911. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


Ill 


112 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


VICTOR -(JRADK  ANUiy  s'1'1';I':K.  Ciaiid  chainpioii  at  ("liicago 
Jnternational  Live  Slock  Exposition  of  I9n.  Bred  by  W.  J.  Miller,  of 
Newton,  Iowa.  Fed  and  exhibited  by  the  Iowa  State  College.  Sold  by 
Clay,  Robinson  &.  Co.  at  90  cents  a  ponnd,  weighing  1,610  pounds, 
bringing  $1,449.00.  Bought  by  The  Fair  at  Chicago,  and  slaughtered 
by  Armour  &  Co.,  the  slaughter  record  being  09.87  per  cent,  of  dressed 
meat  to  carcass.  That  the  price  obtained  was  a  remarkable  one  was 
reflected  in  the  fact  that  it  was  the  highest  a  fat  two-year-old  steer 
ever  made,  and  the  highest  i)aid  at  the  International  Show  for  any  fat 
steer  in  eleven  years. 


PONTIAC  CLOTHILLE  DE  KOL.  2d.  H.-B.  NO.  69,99  1,  A  R..  NO. 
5,279 — HOLSTEIN  COW,  AND  THE  CHAMPION  COW  OF  THE 
WORLD — ALL  BREEDS.  2r,,318  pounds  milk,  1,017.28  pounds 
butter-fat,  1,271.6  pounds  butter,  80  per  cent,  fat,  in  365  days,  A.R.O. 
Owned  by  Stevens  Bros.,  Liverpool,  N,  Y. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


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COLORADO  E.,  2:04%,  by  the  Bondsman,  dam  Flossie  McGregor. 
The  world's  champion  three-year-old  trotter.  Magnificent  photograph 
by  Schreiber.  COLORADO  E.  is  owned  by  George  H.  Estabrook,  of 
Denver,  Colo. 


SIR  BEETS  CORNUCOPIA  I^'ETHEIiLAND,  38,400 — Grand 
champion  Holstein  bull  at  the  Minnesota  State  Fair,  1910;  Iowa  Dairy 
Show;  National  Dairy  Show,  etc.  Owned  by  W.  S.  Moscript,  North  St. 
Paul,  Minn. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


CHAMPION    RED    CLOUD — ()>i:     "l 
WINNERS.      Owned    and   exhibited   by   Thos. 
Mass.      Photo  by  Schreiber,  of  Philadelphia. 


NOTABLE    PRIZE 
Lawson,   of    Boston, 


LADY  EFFIE— CHAMPION  CLYDESDALE  MARE  AT  THE  ILLI- 
NOIS STATE  FAIR  OF  1909.  She  won  first  in  class  for  aged  mares 
and  champion  also  in  a  show  of  Clydesdales  that  was  above  the  aver- 
age.    Exhibited  by  James  Kennedy,  of  Utica,  111. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


115 


FRENCH  COACH  STALLION — PERFECTION.  Picture  taken  at 
seventeen  years  old.  His  sons  and  daughters  at  the  time  of  his  death, 
in  1885,  had  been  sold,  amo-.inting  to  $150,000.  PERFECTION  was 
grand  champion  at  Columbian  Exposition.  Owned  by  Dunham, 
Fletcher  &  Coleman,  of  Wayne,  111. 


A  GROUl'  UF  POLLED  DURHAM  FEMALES  Lied  and  ovvnud 
by  J.  H.  Miller  &  Sons,  Peru,  Ind.  This  group  includes  on  the  right 
QUEEN  OF  MIAMI,  a  tour-year-old  champion  cow  at  State  Fairs,  and 
in  the  center  WANDERER'S  VIOLET,  senior  sweepstakes  cow  at  the 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition  of  1911. 


116  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


I'.AROX  (M.1FT0X--FIRST-PRIZE  AGED  STALLION  AND 
CHAMPION  CLYDESDALE  STALLION  AT  THE  IOWA  STATE  FAIR 
OF  1909.  Exhibited  by  W.  V.  Hixson,  of  Marengo,  Iowa.  BARON 
CLIFTON  was  an  easy  winner,  being  very  close  to  tlie  conformation  of 
the  ideal   Clydesdale. 


I'li.MKii:  q!  i:i:.\     i.ijLvxD  chaivipion  Hereford  fe.male 

AT  INDIANA,  ILLINOIS  AND  MISSOURI  STATE  FAIRS.  Also  first- 
prize  winner  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition  of 
1908.  Exhibited  by  W.  T.  McCray,  of  Orchard  Lake  Stock  Farm, 
Kentland,  Indiana.  This  magnificent  cow  with  calf  at  side  represents 
practical  perfection  in  beef  cattle. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  117 


DISPUTER— MISSOURI  AGRICULTURAL  COLLEGE  STEER. 
Winner  of  four  champion  prizes  in  1911.  Was  champion  steer  under 
twelve  months  old  and  champion  grade  Hereford  at  Chicago  Interna- 
tional Live  Stock  Exposition  of  1911. 


KING  CUMBERLAND — riHOKTHOKN  BULL.  Photograph  at  the 
age  of  eighteen  months,  when  he  weighed  1,500  pounds.  His  great 
show  ring  career  brought  him  as  winner  of  the  grand  championship  at 
the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition  in  1908,  when  he  was 
a  long  yearling.  During  that  season  H.  H.  Powell  &  Son,  of  Linn 
Grove,  Iowa,  sold  him  to  G.  H.  White,  of  Emerson,  Iowa,  and  after 
winning  the  grand  championship  he  was  transferred  to  the  Elmendorf 
Farm,  Lexington,  Ky. 


118  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


CUVON — CHAMPION  PERCHERON  STALLION  AT  THE  NE- 
BRASKA STATE  FAIR.  Exhibited  by  Maasdam  &  Wheeler,  of  Fair- 
field, Iowa.  At  this  Fair  Percherons  made  a  great  showing,  as  many 
as  twenty-four  colts  were  exhibited  in  one  class.  CUVON  is  a  massive 
but  active  aged  stallion. 


CHAMPIU.X  OXFORD  DOWN  EWE  at  State  Fairs  of  Indiana, 
New  York,  Michigan  and  Illinois,  also  at  the  American  Royal  Show  of 
1911.  Owned  and  exhibited  by  Geo.  McKerrow  &  Son,  Pewaukee,  Wis. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


IMP.  BRITISH  GLOin,  I  sii,;(i4— SHORTHORN  BULL.  Owned 
by  C.  F.  Curtiss,  of  Rockwood  Farm,  Ames,  Iowa.  BRITISH  GLORY 
was  shown  at  nine  Fairs  in  Central  Illinois  and  won  nine  firsts  and 
eight  sweepstakes  prizes.  He  has  been  at  the  head  of  the  Rockwood 
Farm  Herd  of  Shorthorns  during  the  past  five  years  and  has  proven 
himself  a  sire  of  exceptional  merit.    . 


IMPROVER— POLAND-CHINA  BOAR.  Junior  champion  of  the 
breed  at  Missouri  State  Fair,  1911,  where  photograph  was  taken.  His 
weight  was  400  pounds.  IMPROVER  was  exhibited  by  D.  B.  Right- 
mire,  of  Monticello,  Mo. 


120 


THE    BOOK    OF  LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


CHAMPION  HACKNEY  MARE— QUEEN  OF  DlAMUXDb.  lliit. 
is  considered  as  being  ihe  best  high-stepping  mare  to-day  in  the 
United  States.  She  was  first  and  champion  at  the  Kansas  City 
Royal  Show;  also  first  in  the  greatest  class  of  all  recognized  coach 
breeds  ever  shown  in  the  United  States  at  the  Chicago  Horse  Show, 
1906.  QUEEN  OF  DIAMONDS  was  sired  by  Judge  Moore's  renowned 
champion  Forest  King,  and  owned  by  Trumans'  Pioneer  Stud  Farm, 
Bushnell,  111. 


JOHN  HOOKER'S  PRIZE  CALVES.— This  is  a  bunch  of  prize- 
winning  Hereford  calves  exhibited  at  the  Great  St.  Louis  Fair  of  1901 
by  John  Hooker,  of  New  London,  Ohio,  and  is  published  here  as  a 
reminder  of  that  great  Fair. 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


121 


INTIME  (83,ir)3),  44,105 — PERCHERON  STALLION.  Foaled 
March,  1908.  Winner  of  first  prize  and  gold  medal,  Chicago  Interna- 
tional Live  Stock  Exposition.  Champion  at  Ohio  State  Fair,  1910  and 
1911.      Imported  and  exhibited  by  McLaughlin  Bros.,  Columbus,  Ohio. 


THE  CONFESSOR — POLLED  DURHAM  BULL.  Exhibited  by 
J.  H.  Miller,  Peru,  Ind.  THE  CONFESSOR  was  junior  champion  of 
the  breed  up  to  two  years  ago,  and  since  then  has  been  grand  cham- 
pion and  champion  without  a  single  defeat.  Was  grand  champion. 
International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1911. 


122 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


.MAlvllA  l»l  II.vUmIv  {'.  \\  1{|'.1.(;1A.\  -^lAi.LiMA  r  irst-prizc 
wiuuer  and  champion  of  his  breed  at  the  Iowa  State  Fair,  1908.  Ex- 
hibited by  Finch  Bros.,  Joliet,  111.  Belgians  are  a  straight,  every-day, 
heavy-weight,  draft  breed  of  horses.  A  great  middle  and  big  ends  are 
characteristic  of  the  breed.  Stallions  that  do  not  weigh  2,000  pounds 
are  a  disappointment. 


DUROCK— CHAMPION  RED  POLLED  BULL  AT  THE  IOWA 
STATE  FAIR,  1909.  Exhibited  by  Dan  Clark,  of  Cedar  Falls,  Iowa. 
At  this  show  there  were  Red  Polled  cattle  exhibited  from  four  dif- 
ferent states,  and  it  was  said  by  good  judges  that  Red  Polls  are  im- 
proving all  the  time. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


123 


MlSSOnil  KING — DARK  BAY  STALI.IOX.  Sixteen  hands  high, 
six  years  old.  The  champion  saddle  horse  of  Missouri  of  1911,  having 
beaten  all  stallions,  mares  and  geldings  in  competition.  Won  cham- 
pionship at  American  Royal  and  St.  Louis  Horse  Show.  Owned  and 
exhibited  by  W.  P.  Hawkins,  Bowling  Green,  Mo. 


HOWIES  EMERALD — ^Junior  champion  Ayrshire  female  at  Min- 
nesota State  Fair;  also  junior  and  grand  champion  female  at  Wis- 
CQUsift  State  Fair,  1911.     Exhibited  by  Adam  S^itz,  Waukesha,  Wig. 


124 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


HIS  ^JA.IESTY.  THE  GRAND  CHAMPION  SHORTHORN  BULL 
SIDELIGHT — Champion.  Shorthorn  bull  at  the  Illinois  State  Fair  and 
other  important  shows,  and  grand  champion  of  the  Shorthorn  breed  at 
the  American  Royal  Show.  SIDELIGHT  is  a  son  of  Royal  Wonder, 
and  his  grand  championship  was  won  at  the  strongest  Shorthorn  Show 
ever  held  at  Kansas  City.  His  Majesty,  the  grand  champion  SIDE- 
LIGHT, is  a  full  aged  bull,  and  was  exhibited  by  F.  W.  Harding,  of 
Waukesha,  Wis. 


HER  MAJESTY,  THE  GRAND  CHAMPION  MARGARET — CHAM- 
PION HEREFORD  FEMALE  AT  THE  IOWA  AND  ILLINOIS  STATE 
FAIRS.  Also  grand  champion  female  of  the  Herefords  at  the  Amer- 
ican Royal  Show.  Exhibited  by  W.  S.  Fowler  &  Son,  of  Fowler, 
Indiana.  MARGARET  is  daughter  of  Prime  Lad,  the  St.  Louis 
World's  Fair  champion;  her  dam  was  Lovey  Mary,  and  she  was  calved 
in  October,  1905. 


THE    BOOK    OF,  LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


125 


of  the  Morris  six-horse  team  of  Clydesdales,  lie  is  the  heaviest  in  a 
team  that  averages  2,100  pounds.  He  has  thirty  or  more  blue  ribbons 
and  championships  to  his  credit  in  the  show  rings,  including  the 
gelding  championships  of  the  Royal  Agricultural  Show  in  England  and 
the  Highland  Agricultural  Show  of  Scotland.  DREW  is  an  absolutely 
perfect  specimen  of  a  massive  Clydesdale  work  horse. 


SCO-it;. i:  \      ki^ditoi^   _■;..:;;— grand  champion  O.  I.  C. 

BOAR  AT  THE  MlSSULKl  STATb]  r  AIR  OF  1911,  where  the  photo 
was  taken.  When  exhibited,  SCOTTLEA  CREDITOR  was  three  years 
old  and  weighed  916  pounds.  Owned  and  exhibited  by  L.  W.  and 
R.  H.  Scott,  of  Nelson,  Mo. 


126  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


BARONS  VOUCHER— CHAMPION  CLYDESDALE  STALLION 
AT  THE  CHICAGO  INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION  OF 
1908.  Exhibited  by  Galbraith  &  Son,  of  DeKalb  county,  Illinois. 
This  grand  stallion  was  foaled  in  April,  1902,  and  is  in  fact  a  massive 
draft  horse.  He  is  strong  and  muscular  without  surplus  fat,  carrying 
only  flesh  enough  to  give  a  shapely  appearance.  Although  in  the 
annual  contest  there  Avere  heavier  limbs  and  greater  weight  against 
him,  he  had  sufficient  development  with  his  other  qualities  to  win  the 
grand  prize. 


PRINCEPS  LASSIE — CHAMPION  HEREFORD  COW  IN  IOWA 
CLASS,  IOWA  STATE  FAIR.  Also  grand  champion  at  the  Sioux  City 
Interstate  Show.  She  is  a  full  aged  cow  and  highly  representative  of 
tU$  breea.     Exhibited  by  O.  S.  Gibbons  &  Sons,  of  Early,  Iowa. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  127 


LIVELY  BEESWING — CHAMPION  IN'  HACKNEY  MAKE  BREED- 
ING CLASSES.  Light  chestnut  with  half-moon  star  on  face  and  white 
ankles  behind.  She  is  three  years  old  and  unbroken  to  harness,  and 
stands  1-5.2  hands.  Said  to  be  the  highest-priced  Hackney  mare  ever 
imported  from  England.      Photograph  by  Schrelber  &  Sons. 


MISSOURI  GIRL,  290,794— GRAND  CHAMPION  DUROC-JERSEY 
SOW  AT  MISSOURI  STATE  FAIR  OF  1911.  The  photograph  was 
taken  September  8th,  1911,  when  she  weighed  450  pounds.  Exhib- 
ited by  McFarland  Bros.,  Sedalia,  Mo. 


128 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


THK  CUBAN  MILITARY  HORSE. — The  picture  represents  a  tyi)- 
ical  horse  bought  for  service  in  Cuba  by  Mr.  George  W.  Maxwell,  who 
had  a  contract  for  1,000  head.  The  sizes  bought  were  from  141/2  to 
1  r.  1^  hands,  all  geldings,  solid  colors,  black,  bay,  brown  or  sorrel,  four 
to  seven  years  old,  in  fair  condition,  saddle  broKe,  no  fancy  gaits. 
The  horses  are  for  use  l-y  officers  of  the  Cu])an  Army  and  Rural  Guard. 


DALES  VISCOUNT — A  YEARLING  SHORTHORN  BULL.  First 
in  class  and  junior  champion  Shorthorn  bull  at  the  Iowa  State  Fair; 
also  prize  winner  at  other  Fairs.  Exhibited  by  D.  R.  Hanna,  of 
Ravenna,  Ohio. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  129 


HIS  MAJESTY,  THE  GRAND  CHAMPION  REPEATER — CHAM- 
PION HEREFORD  BULL  AT  THE  NEBRASKA  STATE  FAIR,  ST. 
JOSEPH  INTERSTATE  P'AIR,  GRAND  CHAMPION  OF  THE  MIS- 
SOURI STATE  FAIR,  AND  GRAND  CHAMPION  AT  THE  AMERICAN 
ROYAL  SHOW.  REPEATER  is  a  senior  yearling  and  the  most  distin- 
guished and  sensational  winner  in  the  show  rings  of  the  season  of 
1909.  Exhibited  by  Overton  Harris,  of  Harris,  Mo.  REPEATER  was 
also  senior  and  grand  champion  of  the  Chicago  International  Live 
Stock  Exposition  of  1910. 


I 


A  PAIR  OF  POLAND-CHINAS. — This  photograph  was  taken  by 
Dave  Risk,  famous  photo  and  sketch  artist.  The  pigs  are  the  boar 
KLEVER'S  BEST,  104,856,  and  the  sow  JAUNITA,  14,672,  champion 
and  grand  champion  at  the  American  Royal  Show  of  1911.  Exhibited 
by  G.  M.  Curnutt.  Montserrat,  Mo. 


130 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SIR  MARCUS— CHAMPION  CLYDESDALE  STALLION,  CHICAGO 
INTERNATIONAL  OF  1907.  E.xhibited  by  Graham  Renfrew  Co.,  of 
Bedford  Park,  Toronto.  Canada. 


l.All^■  FRAGRANT— F]RST-PRIZE  AGED  SHORTHORN  COW 
AT  THE  NEBRASKA  STATE  FAIR.  Exhibited  by  Owen  Kane,  of 
Wisner,  Nebraska.  At  this  Fair  about  175  elegant  Shorthorns  were 
exhibited,  including  some  of  the  best  herds  from  Iowa. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  131 


SULTAN'S  CREED— POLLED  DURHAM  BULL.  Age,  June, 
1910,  photograph  as  a  junior  yearling.  Exhibited  by  J.  H.  Miller, 
Peru,  Ind.  Winner  of  ])rizes  in  the  State  Fair  Circuit  and  junior 
champion  of  the  breed  at  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition 
of  1911. 


JUNKER— CHAMPION    BROWN     SWISS    BULL    AT     ILLINOIS 
AND  OTHER  STATE  FAIRS.  Exhibited  by  E.  M.  Barton,  Hinsdale,  lU. 


132 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


HER  -MAJESTY,  THE  GKWi)  CIIA.MI'ION  SIIORTHORX  COW 
^DOROTHEA,  2d.  Exhibited  by  C.  E.  Clarke,  of  St.  Cloud,  Minn. 
She  was  the  senior  and  grand  champion  Shorthorn  cow  in  her  own 
state;  also  at  others,  including  Missouri;  also  senior  and  grand  cham- 
pion at  the  American  Royal  Show  in  the  greatest  contest  in  the  history 
of  that  great  Exposition. 


JAUNITA,  146,072— FIRST-PRIZE  AND  JUNIOR  POLAND- 
CHINA  SOW  AT  THE  MISSOURI  STATE  FAIR  OF  1911,  where  pho- 
tograph was  taken.  Her  weight  at  the  Fair  was  500  pounds.  Owned 
by  G.  M.  Curnutt,  Moutserrat,  Mo. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


133 


II 


REX  ARBUCKLE,  BY  REX  McDONALD. — Was  retired  to  the 
stud  with  a  record  of  sixty  blues  and  five  reds.  Owned  by  W.  F. 
Arbuckle,  of  Silver  Creek,  Ky. 


PAUL  SOLDENE  DE  KOL^SIX  YEARS  AND  TEN  MONTHS 
OLD.  Representative  Holstein  bull.  P'irst-prize  winner  at  the  National 
Dairy  Show,  Chicago,  1907.  Exhibited  by  F.  P.  Knowles,  Auburn,  Mass. 


134 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


RENA  TIOSS  AYRSHIRE  COW.  On.'  o;  the  chaiiii)!*)!!  per- 
formers of  the  breed.  Owned  by  .John  R.  Valentine,  Bryn  ^Mawr,  Pa. 
When  picture  was  taken  she  hnd  .just  been  admitted  to  the  Advanced 
Register  with  a  year's  record  of  1 5,072  pounds  of  milk  and  751 
pounds  of  butter,  the  same  being,  at  that  time,  high  milk  and  butter 
records  of  the  breed. 


»^^.i^'"f   I 


(;i;.\M»  ('ii.\Mi'i().\-   siii-:i':i'   at   CHICAGO  internatioxai. 

LIVE  STOCK  EXI'OSITIOX  OF  1011.— The  average  weight  was  165 
pounds.  They  were  bought  at  South  Omaha  as  feeders,  averaging  132 
pounds,  and  fed  to  a  finish  for  the  exhibition  by  J.  Orton  Finley,  of 
Oneida,  111.  These  sheep  were  a  cross  of  Cotswold  Ramson  Grade 
Merinos  and  were  raised  by  J.  A.  Delfelder,  of  Wolton,  Wyq. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  13  5 


LADY  SEATUX  -  D.\UK  BAY  liACKNEY  ALVUE,  A\lTiI  WHITE 
HIND  FEET,  FIVE  YEARS  OLD,  AND  STANDS  15.1  HANDS  HIGH. 
Bred  by  Albert  Walker,  of  Seaton  Ross,  England,  and  imported  by  Mr. 
Wm.  H.  Moore.  LADY  SEATON  was  discovered  in  the  English 
pasture  and  purchased  when  she  was  unbroken  for  $3,000.  Upon 
being  shown  to  harness  she  immediately  took  the  first  prize.  The 
best  authorities  upon  show  horses,  such  as  L.  M.  Newgass  and  M.  H. 
Tichenor,  say  that  she  is  not  only  the  finest  Hackney,  but  she  is  the 
finest  harness  horse  of  any  breed  they  ever  saw.  The  magnificent 
illustration  of  LADY  SEATON  is  from  a  photograph  by  Schreiber  & 
Sons,  Animal  Photographers,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa.  In  the  United 
States  LADY"  SEATON  has  won  many  blue  ribbons  and  championships. 


MARKET  HOGS— A  CHAMPION  LOAD.      Sold  at  the  St.  Louis 
market  in  the  month  of  July,  1909. 


136 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


IMP.  HAYES  ROSIE,  15,476— GUERNSEY  COW.  Dam  of  the 
great  bull,  Imp.  Yeoman,  sire  of  the  famous  cow,  Dolly  Dimple.  Since 
arrival  in  this  country  she  has  produced  14,633  pounds  of  milk,  4.88 
per  cent,  fat,  containing  714.31  pounds  of  butter-fat,  equal  to  833.36 
pounds  of  commercial  butter.  IMP.  HAYES  ROSIE  is  owned  by 
F.  Lothrop  Ames,  of  Langwater  Farms,  North  Easton,  Mass. 


:'m;,li-;i  1  1  ,r  i;  1 1  \M  cmW"  .,  md  champion  of 
the  breed  at  the  Chicago  International  Exposition  of  1907.  Exhibited 
by  Shaver  &  Deuker,  of  Kalona,  Iowa. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  137 


EDXA  MAE— GRAND  CHAMPION  SADDLE  .AL\RE  OF  KEN- 
TUCKY. Her  record  of  triumphs  in  the  show  ring  is  a  remarkable 
one.  EDNA  MAE  is  owned  and  exhibited  by  Mrs.  R.  T.  Lowndes,  of 
Clarksville,  W.  Va.  Photograph  by  Thomas  A.  Knight,  of  Lex- 
ington, Ky. 


LORD  MAR — CrUERNSEY  BULL.  Exhibited  by  W.  W.  Marsh,  of 
Waterloo,  Iowa.  Champion  at  the  Iowa  State  Fair  and  grand  cham- 
pion Guernsey  bull  at  the  National  Dairy  Show  of  1911.  At  the 
latter  show,  ten  splendid  Guernsey  herds  competed  for  honors,  and  it 
was  pronounced  one  of  the  best  exhibits  of  this  breed  ever  seen  in  a 
show  ring. 


138 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


years  old,  by  Dr.  llook'.-r,  2:23^4,  dam  Lena  S.,  2:22\(>.  HIGHRALL 
was  one  of  the  sensational  performers,  season  of  1907.  His  perform- 
ance at  Libertyville,  Ind.,  .Tuly  4th,  won  the  world's  record  for  a  green 
trotter.  HIGHBALL  became  famous  in  the  hands  of  Mr.  F.  G.  Jones, 
of  Kentucky,  who  bought  him  for  $17,500  before  he  made  a  record. 


CASiolv-  ili:ui:i(>Kl*  N  KARLING  BULL.  Weighing  1,375 
pounds  at  eighteen  months  old.  Bred  and  exhibited  by  Dr.  J.  E. 
Logan,  Sunset  Herefords,  Kansas  City,  Mo.  He  won  the  junior  cham- 
pionship at  the  Chicago  International  Exposition  as  a  calf. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


139 


CASTILLE,  78,956  (G4,553)--mPORTED  PERCHEROX  MARE. 
Weighing  about  2.200  pounds.  Was  a  prominent  prize  winner  in 
France,  and  won  first  and  championship  at  the  International  Live 
Stoclc  Exposition  of  1911.  W^as  shown  and  is  the  property  of  Dun- 
hams, Oaklawn  Farm,  Wayne,  111. 


GRAND  CHAMPION  CAR-LOAD  OF  STEERS  AT  CHICAGO  IN- 
TERNATIONAL LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION  OF  1911.  Bred,  fed  and 
exhibited  by  Escher  &  Ryan,  of  Irwin,  Iowa.  Sold  at  $15.75  per  100 
pounds,  fifteen  head  averaging  1,203  pounds,  and  bought  by  J.  Dodd 
Packing  Company,  and  cost  1189.57  per  head. 


140 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


MARTIN  DE  CAPPELLE — CHAMPION  BELGIAN  STALLION  AT 
THE  CHICAGO  INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION.  Ex- 
hibited by  Crouch  &  Son,  Lafayette,  Ind.  This  is  a  chestnut  horse 
and  shown  in  splendid  bloom,  representing  the  massive  Belgian  draft 
type. 


,ii_ 


IMP.  YEOMAN,  8,618— GUERNSEY  BULL.  Famous  as  sire  of 
Dolly  Dimple  and  other  cows  of  extraordinary  merit.  IMP.  YEOMAN 
is  owned  by  Mr.  F.  Lothrop  Ames,  of  Langwater  Farms,  North 
Easton,  Mass. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


141 


BOURBON  KING — FIVE-GAITED  SADDLE  STALLION.  i-'rom 
a  photograph  by  T.  A.  Knight,  of  Lexington,  Ky.  BOURBON  KING 
was  himself  an  undefeated  champion,  and  is  occasionally  brought  into 
prominence  by  the  performances  of  his  sons.  One  of  them,  Bohemian 
King,  fresh  from  winning  a  championship,  was  sold  as  a  two-year-old 
for  $3,000  by  A.  G.  Jones,  of  North  Middleton,  Ky. 


CHAMPION  OXFORD  DOWN  RAM  at  Indiana,  New  York  and 
Michigan  State  Fairs  of  the  year  1911.  Owned  and  exhibited  by  Geo. 
McKerrow  &  Son,  of  Pewaukee,  Wis. 


142 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


LADYLIKE— CHAMPION  CLYDESDALE  MARE  AT  THE 
CHICAGO  INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION  OF  1908. 
Wis.  With  a  grand  show  of  big,  drafty  young  mares  on  exhibit,  she 
Here  we  have  a  filly  two  years  old  and  under  three,  sired  by  Merrimac, 
dam  Lady  Elegant.  Bred  and  exhibited  by  INIcLay  Bros.,  of  Janesville, 
had  to  be  exceptionally  fine  in  build,  with  good  action,  trotting  and 
walking,  to  obtain  the  first  prize,  and  in  the  championship  contest  she 
had  to  compete  with  the  best  on- her  own  farm. 


ENDYMYON— GUERNSEY  BULL.  Senior  and  grand  champion 
at  the  National  Dairy  Show  at  Chicago,  1907.  Exhibited  by  Helen- 
dale  Farms.  Milwaukee,  Wis. 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  143 


SU-XUMA  GIRL.  j::(i.">i^i — BROWN  TROTTIXCl  .\l\liK  Bred  by 
S.  B.  Wright,  of  Santa  Rosa,  California,  and  owned  by  "Lotta"  Crab- 
tree.   Picture  from  copyright  photo  by  Schreiber  &  Sons,  Philadelphia. 


PRIME  LAI),  9rh  — HEREFORD  BULL.  A  champion  of  many 
important  Fairs  and  one  of  the  best,  if  not  the  very  best,  bull  of  the 
Hereford  breed.  PRIME  LAD  is  son  of  the  St.  Louis  Woi'ld's  Fair 
Grand  Champion,  and  was  bred  by  W.  S.  Van  Natta  &  Son,  of  Fowler, 
Indiana. 


144 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


BRILLIANT  D.— PERCHERON  STALLION.  Owned  and  exhib- 
ited by  Taylor  &  Jones,  Williamsville,  111.  His  age  is  three  years. 
Weight,  2,2.50  pounds.  He  v.'on  first  in  class  and  reserve  champion  at 
the  Iowa  State  Fair,  1908.  First  and  champion  at  the  Nebraska  State 
F'air,  1908;  first  and  chami)ion  at  the  Wisconsin  State  Fair,  1908;  and 
first  and  reserve  champion  at  the  Illinois  State  Fair,  1908.  This 
picture  was  taken  at  the  Iowa  State  Fair. 


#^ 


BARGENOCK  GAY  CAVALIER,  11.981— AYRSHIRE  BULL. 
Senior  and  grand  champion  of  the  breed  at  the  State  Fair  of  Minne- 
sota; also  at  Wisconsin,  Illinois  and  other  Shows  and  Expositions. 
Exhibited  by  Adam  Seitz,  Waukesha,  Wis. 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


145 


JACK  O'  DIAMONDS — CHESTNUT  GELDING.  Five-gaited 
show-ring  saddler,  recently  sold  at  the  age  of  nine  years  by  H.  R.  Mid- 
dleton,  of  Mexico,  Mo.,  to  George  Snyder  at  Allentown,  Pa.,  for  $900. 
The  photograph  was  taken  at  Mexico,  Mo.,  in  1910.  In  his  prime  as 
a  show-ring  performer,  .lACK  O'  DIAMONDS  was  the  property  of  Mr. 
Thomas  Dunn,  of  St.  Louis,  Mo. 


COUNT  ABBOTT— SENIOR  CHAMPION  SHORTHORN  BULL, 
IOWA  CLASS,  IOWA  STATE  FAIR.  COUNT  ABBOTT  was  first-prize 
winner  in  the  two-year-old  class.  Iowa  is  a  great  Shorthorn  cattle 
state  and  only  first-class  animals  are  shown.  COUNT  ABBOTT  was 
exhibited  by  C.  S.  McLellan,  of  Lowden,  Iowa. 


146  THE    BOOK    OF    lAVK    STOCK    C'llAMFJONS. 


^^^ 


SURVEYOR — BROWX  SHIME  STALLloX.  IJxliibited  as  a 
yearling  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exi)osition  of  1907, 
and  won  first  in  class  and  championship  of  the  breed.  Exhibited  by 
Wm.  Crownover,  of  Hudson,  Iowa. 


.->(  1 1  r ;  i.s!  I    i;i;ijj;,    iih     ci  i.\  .\i  i'i<  ).\    i'()li,I':i(  nruif.VM  cow 

AT  THI':  M-:HKASKA  state  FAIK.  Exhibited  by  H.  \V.  Deuker,  of 
Wellman,  Iowa.  There  were  five  other  herds  exhibited,  all  of  Nebraska, 
but  the  Iowa  herd  captured  the  championship. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  147 


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GASCON— PERCHERON  STALLION.  The  champion  of  the 
Chicago  International  Exposition  of  1908.  Exhibited  by  Robert  Bur- 
gess &  Son,  of  Wenona,  111.  This  magnificent  stallion  is  less  than 
three  years  old.  He  won  the  fiist  prize  in  a  class  of  the  finest  j'oung 
Percherons  ever  shown  in  a  ring,  then  defeated  the  pick  of  the  other 
three  stallion  rings,  being  proclaimed  champion  over  eighty-two  of  the 
best  Percherons  in  America.  Considering  that  he  is  an  ideal  draft 
horse,  combining  elegance  with  weight  and  power,  GASCON  moves 
with  the  light  step  of  a  spirited  trotter  and  stands  squarely  upon  well- 
set  legs  and  good  feet.  Our  readers  can  accept  this  picture  as  repre- 
senting the  ideal  draft  horse  of  France. 


BEEF  CATTLE — ONE  OF  THE  GREAT  LOADS  OF  TEXAS 
CATTLE  MARKETED  IN  1885  AT  ST.  LOUIS.  Fed  by  the  late 
Samuel  Scaling,  of  St.  Louis  and  Texas. 


148 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS, 


DESERTER— A  CROSS-BRED  STEER.  Champion  calf  at  the 
International  Live  Stock  Exposition  of  1909,  and  champion  grade 
Hereford  steer,  International  of  1910;  also  champion  grade  Hereford 
American  Royal  of  1909  and  1910.  He  was  a  cross  of  Hereford  and 
Angus,  with  black  coat,  white  face  and  without  horns,  weighing  1,050 
pounds  as  a  calf.  Fed  and  exhibited  by  the  Animal  Husbandry  De- 
partment of  the  University  of  Missouri. 


DORSET  SilEEl'--CllAMP10NS  AT  THE  WISCONSIX  STATE 
FAIR.  Dorset  sheep  are  great  favorites  with  all  who  keep  them. 
They  are  noted  for  lamb  raising.  The  owner  of  these  sheep  sells  fall 
lambs  from  his  flock  on  the  Christmas  market  at  Chicago, 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


149 


HILDRED — AVORLD-RENOWNED  SHOW  HARNESS  MARE  OF 
THE  EAST.  Driven  by  her  owner,  Miss  Emily  H.  Bedford,  of  Brook- 
lyn, N.  Y.  This  picture  was  taken  by  Schreiber,  famous  photog- 
rapher, towards  the  end  of  her  show  career.  HILDRED  had  several 
hundred  ribbons  to  her  credit. 


SHAMROCK,  2d. — GRAND  CHAMPION  STEER  AT  THE 
CHICAGO  INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION.  Fed  and 
exhibited  by  the  Iowa  Agricultural  College.  Sold  by  Clay,  Robinson 
&  Co.,  live  stock  commission  agents,  at  the  magnificent  price  of  sixty 
cents  a  pound  to  C.  H.  Morgan  &  Co.,  enterprising  Chicago  butchers. 


ir.o 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


I.\ir.  M1:1»]jLEK— A  THUKULGHBRKD  bay  house.  Leading 
winning  sire  in  the  racing  seasons  of  1904  and  1906.  Then  owned  by 
Clarence  H.  Mackay,  Kingston  Stud,  Lexington,  Ky. 


GOLDEN  BEN— GUERNSEY  BULL,  SIX  YEARS  OLD.  Weighs 
1,625  pounds.  The  picture  was  taken  at  the  Wisconsin  State  Fair, 
where  he  had  just  won  the  championship.  GOLDEN  BEN  was  sired 
by  Ben  Sampson,  5,4  80,  and  his  dam  is  Nellie  B.,  12,305.  We  are  in- 
formed by  the  owners  and  exhibitors,  Messrs.  A.  W.  &  F.  E.  Fox,  of 
Waukesha,  Wis.,  that  this  great  bull  has  a  fine  and  gentle  disposition, 
absolutely  safe  to  ride,  and  anyone  can  get  on  and  ride  him. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  151 


COMO  AND  LUCAXO   -  JXTERXATIOXAL  CliA.MPIOXS.      A  pair 
of  famous  roadsters.  Exhibited  bj'  E.  T.  Stotesbury,  of  Philadelphia, Pa. 


JERSEY   CATTLE— A   CHAMPION  HERD.      Being  handled   and 
made  ready  for  exhibit  at  the  New  York  State  Fair. 


152  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


INCLUSE — GRAND  CHAMPION  PERCHBRON  STALLION  AT 
THE  MISSOURI  STATE  FAIR,  1911,  WHERE  PHOTO  WAS  TAKEN. 
INCLUSE  was  three  years  old  when  exhibited  and  weighed  2,200 
pounds.  Owned  by  Percheron  Importing  Company,  South  St. Joseph, Mo. 


CHAMPION  CAR-LOAD  HEREFORD  FAT  CATTLE  AT  AMER- 
ICAN ROYAL,  1911.  Bred  by  Adams  &  Roberts  in  Missouri  and  fed 
by  Horace  G.  Adams,  Maple  Hill,  Kansas.  Sold  by  Clay,  Robinson  & 
Co.  at  $9.40  per  100  pounds;  average  weight,  1,376  pounds. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


153 


DRAGON — CHAMPION  PERCHERON  STALLION  AT  THE 
CHICAGO  INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION,  DECEM- 
BER, 1807.  This  magnificent  black  stallion  was  foaled  in  France, 
March,  1904.  At  the  International  of  1906  he  was  first-prize  two- 
year-old,  and  was  then  sold  for  $2,000  to  Mr.  J.  A.  Spoor,  President  of 
the  Chicago  Union  Stock  Yards.  Being  exhibited  again  a  year  later 
he  receives  the  first  prize  in  the  three-year-old  class  and  the  cham- 
pionship as  the  best  Percheron  stallion  of  any  age  at  the  Show. 


SOUTHDOWN    SHEEP — CHAMPION    PEN.      Imported    in    1909 
and  exhibited  by  McKerrow  &  Son,  Pewaukee,  Wis. 


154 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


COl.UHAM  Srifl'KISI':  -SillliE  .MAKE.  At  the  Chicaso  Inter- 
national Live  Stock  Exposition  of  1911  this  mare  in  foal  and  with  two 
daughters  at  her  side  were  exhibited.  She  was  pronounced  grand 
champion,  and  her  daughter,  Coldham  Charm,  first-prize  three-year- 
old.  Exhibited  by  George  M.  McCray,  Fithian,  111.  Imported  by 
Trumans". 


STAMJAUIJ  lA\UUiTE  CliAMl'lUX  GALLOWAY  iU'LL  AT 
MANY  SHOWS,  including  the  Chicago  International,  190t^.  Eyhibited 
by  C.  S.  Hechtner,  of  Princeton,  111. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


155 


PINK,  24,765  (47,513) — IMPORTED  PERCHERON  STALLION. 
Twice  champion  International,  Chicago.  First  at  Iowa  State  Fair; 
Grand  Sweepstakes,  Minnesota  State  Fair;  First  at  Illinois  State  Fair, 
and  champion  same  show  in  1906.  All  these  winnings  were  the 
highest  possible  at  each  of  the  above  shows.  For  years  at  head  of 
Percheron  stud.  Weight,  2,2  00  pounds.  Claimed  to  be  the  greatest 
individual  and  sire  that  the  Percheron  breed  has  produced  to  date. 
Owned  by  Dunhams,  Wayne,  111. 


CHAMPION    MULES    AT    V/ORK.  Mules    bought   by    Mr.    Smith 

Kirk  of  Mr.  Joseph  Maxwell  at  the  St.  Louis  National  Stock  Yards  at 

$300  each.     All  16 V2   hands  high  and  representing  the  highest-graa^ 
teams  sold  on  the  m,arket. 


156  THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


WRYDELANDS  SUNSHINE— CHAMPION  SHIRE  MARE,  IOWA 
AND  ILLLINOIS  STATE  FAIRS,  1909.  Exhibited  by  Trumans' 
Pioneer  Stud  Farm,  Bushnell,  111. 


FYFIE  KNIGHT— TWO-YEAR-OLD  ABERDEEN-ANGUS  STEER, 
Grand  champion  steer  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposi- 
tion of  1908,  weighing  1,610  pounds.  Exhibited  by  Purdue  Univer- 
sity, Lafayette,  Ind. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


157 


FLORA,  90th — GRAND  CHAMPION  SHORTHORN  FEMALE. 
Exhibited  by  D.  R.  Hanna,  of  Ravenna,  Ohio.  The  picture  was  talton 
at  the  Iowa  State  Fair,  where  she  was  first-prize  aged  Shorthorn  cov/ 
and  female  champion  of  the  breed.  FLORA,  90th,  was  calved  March 
28,  1905;  her  sire  was  Old  Lancaster,  and  her  dam  Scotch  Lassie,  and 
won  many  premiums. 


SUNNY  U.  J. — HEREFORD  BULL.  First-prize  bull  and  cham- 
pion bull  of  the  Hereford  breed  at  the  Interstate  Show  held  at  Sioux 
City,  Iowa.     Exhibited  by  Mr.  J.  J.  Early,  of  Baring,  Mo. 


158 


THE    BOOK    OF    I.IVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


ROYAL  GREY — THREE-YEAR-OLD  SHIRE  STALLION.  Im- 
ported and  exhibited  by  Trumans'  Pioneer  Stud  Farm,  Bushnell,  111. 
One  of  the  greatest  Shire  stallions  ever  seen  in  this  country.  Jnterna- 
national  grand  champion,  1911. 


SHIRE    HORSE    CHAMPIONS.— Exhibited    by    T-unuius-    I'ioiwev 
Stud  F9,rm,  Bushnell.  III.,  ahd  r^ady  for  the  Show  Ring. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  159 


ROLAND — CHAMPION  AMERICAN-BRED   PERCHERON  STAL- 
LION. ILLINOIS  STATE  FAIR.      Exhibited  by  D.  Augstin,  Carlock,  111. 


POLLED  DURHAM  COW — ROYAL  QUEEN.  Senior  champion 
cow  at  the  Chicago  International  Exposition,  1900.  Exhibited  by 
J.  H.  Miller,  of  Peru,  Ind. 


160 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


FAKENHA5I  PRINCESS  —  HACKNEY  MARE.  One  of  the 
famous  show  horses  owned  by  Mr.  W.  H.  Moore,  of  New  York  City. 
Photo  by  Schreiber,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


^^€:ti 


ACTIVE  FOREST  KING— HACKNEY  HORSE.  Sired  by  the 
great  champion  sire.  Forest  King,  and  half  brother  to  Queen  of 
Diamonds.  ACTIVE  FOREST  KING  was  champion.  Kansas  City 
Royal  and  Chicago  Horse  Show  of  1906. 


THE    BOOK    OF    IJVR    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  161 


^  ^  '0 


PARTHENA  HENGBRVELD  —  HOLSTBIN  COW.  First-prize 
and  champion  cow  at  the  Iowa,  Minnesota,  Wisconsin  and  Illinois 
State  Fairs  in  ITiOT  and  1909.  Exhibited  by  W.  B.  Barney  &  Sons, 
Chapin,  Iowa. 


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ELMDI'LXK  Ki.\(;,  l,:i;i;»--T-\Ai\VOKl  H  l;u.AK.  Championship 
winner  at  the  Bhie  Grass  Fair,  Lexington,  Ky.,  1910;  also  champion, 
1911,  Louisville,  Ky.,  Memphis,  Tenn.,  and  Hot  Springs,  Ark.  Exhib- 
ited by  Boonedale  Stock  Farm,  Chas.  Ford,  Proprietor,  Mortons- 
ville,  Kentucky. 


1G2  THE    BOOK    OF    TJVE    STOCK    CTIAMPIONS. 


k  rf^ 


% 


THE  ADMIRAL — MORGAN  STALLIUX.  Color,  hrunze  sorrel. 
15%  hands,  l,2r)0  pounds.  Won  first  prize  as  yearling,  two-year-old 
and  three-year-old  at  Illinois  State  Fail'.  At  head  of  Mountain  Vale 
Ranch  Stud  of   Morgans.    Owned  hy  Richard  Sellman,   Rochelle,  Texas. 


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:\IISTRESSPrECE— CHAMPION  BERKSHIRE  SOW  AT  MANY 
IMPORTANT  FAIRS  AND  INCLVDING  GRAND  CHAMPIONSHIP  AT 
THE  CHICAGO  INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION. 
Exhibited  by  Gregory  Farm,  W.  S.  Corsa,  Proprietor,  Whitehall,  111. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


163 


llEATHERBLOOM — WORLD'S    CHAMPION    JUMPER.      Richard 
Donnelly  up.      This  picture  was  taken  by  Schreiber  in  1902. 


LOU  DILLON,  1:. 5 8 1/2 —CHAMPION  TROTTER  IN  HARNESS. 
"This  delicate  deer-like  daughter  of  Pegasus  floats  through  the  air 
with  no  more  effort  than  a  thing  with  wings." — Horse  Review. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


WRYDELAND'S  STARLKJHT — CHAMPION  SHIRE  MARE.  Im- 
ported, owned  and  exhibited  by  Trinnans'  Pioneer  Stud  Farm.  Bush- 
nell.  111.  The  age  of  this  wonderful  mare  is  eight  years:  she  stands 
17  hands  hi2;h;  weighed  2  110  pounds  the  dav  her  photograph  was 
taken.  WRYDELAND'S  STARLIGHT  was  bought  by  the  Iowa  Agri- 
cultural College  for  breeding  purposes. 


PKI.MK  LAI»  A.\l)  LOILXA  DOOXE  ( ;  K  A  X  I )  ( '  I!  A  M  I'l  O.X  IIEUI«:- 
FORDS  AT  THE  LOUISIANA  PURCHASE  EXPOSITION.  Exhibited 
by  W.  S.  Vau  Natta  &,  Son,  Fowler,  Ina. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


165 


166  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


BELLK  :\1AC  ARA-  CHA^NIPIOX  AMKRUWX-BRED  CLYDES- 
DALE MARE  AT  ILLINOIS  STATE  FAIR.  Exhibited  by  A.  C.  Wylie, 
Utica,  HI.  This  picture  shows  a  pure-bred  Clydesdale  mare  bred  and 
raised  in  the  United  States. 


PERFECTION,  92,891 — HEREFORD  BULL.  Senior  champion, 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1901.  PERFECTION 
was  then  under  three  years  old.  Exhibited  by  Thos.  Clark,  Beecher,  III. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  167 


CARNOT — CHAMPION  PERCHERON  STALLION  AT  PARIS, 
FRANCE;  also  at  State  Fairs  of  Indiana,  Illinois  and  Iowa.  At  the 
Illinois  State  Fair  the  contest  was  between  the  pick  of  ten  of  the  finest 
herds  in  the  country.  CARNOT  was  imported  and  exhibited  by  J. 
Crouch  &  Son,  of  Lafayette,  Ind.  After  winning  grand  championship 
at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition  of  1909,  he  was 
sold  for  $10,000  to  W.  S.  Corsa,  Proprietor  Gregory  Farm,  White- 
hall, 111. 


GOOD  E  NUFF  AGAIN — DUROC-JERSEY  BOAR.  Grand  cham- 
pion boar  at  the  Ohio  State  Fair  of  1910.  Weight,  970  pounds  at  29 
months  of  age.     Exhibited  by  Wm.  H.  Robbins,  Springfield,  Ohio. 


168 


THE    ROOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


DAN  PATCH — THE  IMPORTED  SHIRE  HORSE.  A  draft  stal- 
lion, second  time  grand  champion  of  the  breed  at  the  Chicago  Interna- 
tional Live  Stock  Exposition.  Exhibited  by  Trumans'  Pioneer  Stud 
Farm,  Bushnell,  111.,  and  sold  to  Mr.  John  J.  Mitchell,  of  Lake  Geneva, 
Wis.,  for  ten  thousand  dollars. 


CHAMPION  COTSWOLD  EWE  AT  OHIO.  NEW  .lERSEY,  PENN- 
SYLVANIA, VERMONT  AND  VIRGINIA  STATE  FAIRS.  Exhibited 
by  M.  H.  McNeill,  New  Richmond,  Ind. 


THE    BOOK    OF  "LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  169 


lOLANTHE,  40,9:'i> — PlilRCHKKUN  MAKE.  Shown  in  exhibition 
thirty-eight  times  and  thirty-six  times  first  or  champion,  including 
championship  mare  two  different  years  at  the  Chicago  International 
Live  Stock  Exposition.  Owned  by  Gregory  Farm,  W.  S.  Corsa,  Pro- 
prietor, Whitehall,  Illinois. 


READERS  OF  THE  BOOK  OF  LIVE  STOCK  CHAMPIONS  WILL 
FIND  A  FULL  AND  COMPLETE  INDEX  ON  THE  LAST  PAGES  OF 
THE  WORK. 


WHITEHALL  SULTAN  -SHORTJIOKX  HULL.  Giand  champion 
of  the  breed  at  many  shows.  Exhibited  by  F.  W.  Harding,  Wau- 
kesha, Wisconsin. 


170 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


^^ 


ROMEO — ANGORA  GOAT.  Champion  buck  at  El  Paso,  Texas, 
October,  1910.  Bred  by  F.  O.  Landrum,  Laguna,  Texas.  Weight  of 
fleece,  18  pounds  at  18  months'  growth,  20%  inches  long.  Sold  to 
Bear  Creek  Angora  Goat  Company  for  $250.00. 


PAWNEE  CHIEF  HADLEY — POLAND-CHINA  BOAR.  Senior 
and  grand  champion  at  Missouri  State  Fair  of  1911.  Weighed  1,060 
pounds  in  the  show  ring.  Exhibited  by  James  Gildow  &  Sons,  James- 
port,  Missouri. 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


171 


FRISSON— IMPORTED  PERCHERON  STALLION.  Champion 
at  Indiana  State  Fair  of  1911.  Owned  and  imported  by  J.  Crouch,  & 
Son,  La  Fayette,  Ind. 


SHORTHORN  CATTLE— THREE  MEMBERS  OF  THE  CHAM- 
PION HERD.  Exhibited  by  C.  E.  Clarke,  St.  Cloud,  Minn.,  at  the 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition  of  1900. 


172 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


GRAND  CHAMPION  PEN  OF  BARROWS  AT  THE  CHICAGO 
INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION  OF  1909.  These  bar- 
rows were  Berkshires  and  were  fed  and  exhibited  bj'  the  Iowa  Agri- 
cultural College,  Ames,  Iowa;  weighed  300  pounds.  Speaking  of  these 
barrows,  Judge  C.  A.  Kurtze  said  they  were  the  best  pen  ever  exhibited 
at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition.  Their  prominent 
features  were  the  breed  characteristics.  They  were  perfect  market 
hogs,  and  in  conformation  were  uj)  to  the  ideals  of  the  breeder. 


CHAMPION  CHEVIOT  RAM  AT  OHIO  AND  KENTUCKY  STATE 
FAIRS  OF  1911.  Bred  and  exhibited  by  G.  W.  Parnell,  Wingate, 
Ind.,  and  is  owned  noAV  by  Turney  C.  Collins,  Leesburg,  Ky. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  173 


PERFECTION,  2fi0— FAMOUS  JENNET.  Was  shown  fifteen 
times  in  1892  and  took  premiums  eac^h  time.  Amongst  notable  pre- 
miums won  in  class  and  sweepstakes  were  at  State  Fair,  Nashville. 
Tenn.,  1893,  and  World's  Fair,  Chicago,  1893.  Bred  by  W.  J.  Knox, 
of  Murphreesboro,  Tenn.;  afterwards  sold  to  J.  W.  &  .1.  L.  Jones,  Jr., 
of  Columbia,  Tenn. 


TIPPECANOE,  44th — POLLED  DURHAM  BULL.  Owned  by 
Fletcher  S.  Hines,  of  Mallott  Park,  Ind.  Winner  of  many  first  pre- 
miums and  was  junior  champion  at  the  Chicago  International  Live 
Stock  Exposition,  1901,  and  senior  champion  also  at  Chicago.  1902. 


THE    BOOK    OF    T.TVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


COMMODORE,  5th— SHIRE  STALLION.  Champion  at  the 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1903.  Exhibited  by 
Finch  Bros.,  of  Verona,  Illinois. 


CHALLENGER  —  GRADE  HEREFORD  STEER.  Grand  beef 
champion  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1908. 
Fed  and  exhibited  by  the  Agricultural  Experiment  Station,  Lincoln, 
Nebraska.     Weight.  1,750  pounds. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


175 


PINK,  l'4,7liri  (47,?.i;:)— PKRCHKHON  STALLION.  Cliamuion 
at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1903.  Imported 
and  exhibited  by  Dunham,  Fletcher  &  Coleman,  of  Oakland  Farm, 
Wayne,  111.  The  Breeders'  Gazette  says:  "Shown  in  the  grandest  of 
shape  and  smooth  and  level  as  a  die,  he  was  called  by  several  of  the 
judges  the  best  Percheron  stallion  they  had  ever  seen."  PINK  was 
also  champion  at  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,   1904. 


ROAN  HERO -POLLED  DURHAM  BULL.  Senior  and  grand 
champion,  Nebraska  State  Fair.  Exhibited  by  D.  C.  Van  Nice,  Rich- 
laud.  Kansas. 


176 


THE     BOOK     OF    LIVK    STOCK     CHAMPIONS. 


-r^ 


PICKET 

WINNER   AMERICAN    itERBY 

190  3 


PICKKTT--A   THOHOr'IHBPEl)  HORSK.      Winner  of  the  Aniei 
ican  iJerby,  l90;j,  showing  contorniation  of  the  thoroughbred  horse. 


ONETTA — BROWN  SWISS  COW.  l-'irsi -pn/.c  cou  m  liir  I'an- 
American  Show  and  Exposition,  19U1.  Exhibited  by  McLaury  Bros., 
of  Portlandville,  New  York. 


THE     FK)OK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


177 


SIMPSON,  2,129— GERMAN  COACH  STALLION.  Aged  three 
years.  First-prize  winner  at  the  Iowa  and  Indiana  State  Fairs  and 
American  Roval,  Kansas  City,  Mo.  Owned  by  .1.  Crouch  &  Son,  of 
Lafayette,  Indiana. 


HAMPSHIRE  DOWN  SHEEP— ONE  YEARLING  RAM  AND  TWO 
YEARLING  EWES.  Champions  at  four  leading  Fairs  in  Michigan 
and  Indiana,  1902.  Exhibited  by  The  Elk  Horn  Herd,  Geo.  W.  Grim, 
Manager,  Fremont,  Indiana. 


178  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


WYETH — THOROUGH  B I ; , ,  I 
Derby,  1902. 


.^1         Winner  of  the  American 


BEEF  STEEUS  CHIAND  CHAMPION  LOAD  AT  THE  CIHCACO 
INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION  OF  1901.  Fed  by 
D.  W.  Black,  of  Lyndon,  Ohio. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK  CHAMPIONS. 


179 


TORRENT — FREWCH  COACH  STALLION.  Champion  at  the 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1903.  Photographed  on 
the  ground.  Exhibited  by  McLaughlin  Bros.,  of  Columbus,  Ohio,  and 
Kansas  City,  Mo.  Also  grand  champion  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase 
Exposition,  1904. 


STAR  HAL,  2:04%— A  PACER.  "Not  only  is  he  game  and  fast, 
but  one  of  the  handsomest  individual  members  of  his  great  tribe." — 
Horse  Review.     Half-mile  dash,  stallion  record,  0:59%. 


180  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


FANNIE     DH^LARD,     2:03%,     BY     HAL     DILLARl).      Held     the 
world's  record  of  fastest  heat  paced  in  a  race  by  a  mare. 


JEWEL  OF  FARM  HOME — HOLSTEIN  BULL.  Eight  years  old. 
Exhibited  by  W.  B.  Barney  &  Co.,  of  Hampton,  Iowa.  Chami)ion  at 
Iowa  and  Wisconsin  State  Fairs  and  grand  champion  at  the  Illinois 
State  Fair,  1905. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


181 


LADY  HUGHES — CHESTNUT  HARNESS  AND  SADDLE  MARE. 
Winner  of  forty-seven  blue  ribbons  in  1903.  Owned  by  Col.  Jno.  T. 
Hughes,  of  Mulr,  Ky.,  a  famous  breeder  of  saddle  horses. 


CRUSADER — HEREFORD  BULL.  First-prize  two-year-old  and 
champion  at  the  Pan-American  Exposition,  1901.  Exhibited  by  Clem 
Graves,  of  Bunker  Hill,  Ind.,  and  afterwards  sold  to  Ed.  Hawkins,  of 
Earl  Park,  Indiana. 


182  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


,=r  ■•^■-     ■  > 


]:XTll()Kl'i:   PERFORMER— CHAMPION  HACKNEY  STALLION. 
Owned  and  exliibited  by  Mr.  F.  G.  Bourne,  of  New  York  City. 


R.\..L^    ..AST— BERKSHIRE    IJOAR.        ., j:.:    -km;, -ion    a 
leading  Stale  Fairs  of  1911.     Exhibited  by  Gregory  Farm,  W.  S.  Corsa, 
Proprietor,  Wlxitetiall,  Illinois. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


183 


THE  YEARLING  -HAWTHORNE,  6,880  —  SHIRE  HORSE. 
Weight,  1,750  pounds.  Winner  of  the  Gold  Medal  at  the  Chicago 
International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1903,  for  best  American-bred 
Shire  stallion.     Exhibited  by  Lew  W.  Cochran,  of  Crawfordsville,  Ind. 


GRAHAM  OF  AVOMJALE,  :.'u,7  6 «— GALLOWAY  BULL.  First- 
prize  yearling,  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1903. 
Grand  champion  calf,  Kansas  City  Royal,  1902.  Exhibited  by  O.  H. 
Swigart,  of  Champaign,  HI.  Afterwards  sold  to  Mr.  F.  P.  Wild,  of 
Cowgill,  Missouri. 


184  THK    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SOLOMON,  2  4,100 — IMPORTED  BELGIAN  STALLION.  Aged 
three  years:  weight,  2.040  pounds.  First-prize  winner  at  the  Iowa 
State  Fair,  Indiana  State  Fair.  Illinois  State  Fair,  and  first-prize 
winner  at  the  American  Royal  Live  Stock  Show  at  Kansas  Citv,  and 
also  winner  at  the  same  show  of  the  championship  prize  over  all  draft 
breeds  otler  than  Pcrcherons.  Owned  and  exhibited  by  .1.  Crouth  & 
Son,  of  Lafayette,  Ind.,  and  Sedalia,  Mo. 


"RARE  BEAUTY-FAMOUS  WHITE  SHORTHORN  HEIFER. 
Winner  of  Shorthorn  Cup  and  at  Smithfield,  1902.  Bred  by  Her  Late 
Majesty,  Queen  Victoria,  and  exhibited  by  King  Edward,  VIL 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


185 


LOU  DILLON,  1:581/2 -CHAMPION  TROTTER.  Owned  by  Mr. 
C.  K.  G.  Billings.  The  Horse  Review  says:  "She  has  realized  the 
dreams  of  a  century  and  placed  her  name  at  the  beginning  of  a  new  era 
in  the  history  of  the  trotting  turf."  From  copyright  photograph  by 
permission  of  Schreiber  &  Sons,  Art  Photographers,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


DAINTY  OF  WAVERTREE — GALLOWAY  COW.  Champion  at 
many  shows,  including  the  American  Royal  Show,  and  first-prize  aged 
cow  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1903.  Exhib- 
ited by  C.  E.  Clarke,  of  St.  Cloud,  Minn. 


186 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


PEERLESS  WILTON,  39th's,  DEFENDER — HEREFORD  CALF, 
ELEVEN  MONTHS  OLD,  WEIGHING  975  POUNDS.  Grand  champion 
steer  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1906.  Ex- 
hibited by  F.  A.  Nave,  of  Attica.  Ind.  This  was  the  first  time  that  a 
calf  was  awarded  the  grand  championship  at  the  Chicago  International 
Live  Stock  Exposition.  PEERLESS  WILTON'S  DEFENDER  was 
bought  by  the  Iowa  Agricultural  College. 


■  ^' 

Mi    , 

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t^S 

n 

Ui\L  Ol'  iriL  FAMOUS  BEAU  DONALD  PRIZE-WINNING 
HERDS  OF  HEREFORD  CATTLE.  Bred  and  owned  by  W.  H. 
Curtice,  of  Eminence,  Kentucky. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


187 


188 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


GAY  LAD,  ijlh  HAS  XKVKR  KNOWN  DEFEAT  IX  THE  SHOW 
RING.  Has  always  won  first  in  class,  and  as  a  yearling  won  three 
chami)ionshii)s  out  of  eight  shows.  In  1911,  as  a  two-year-old,  he 
won  chanii)ionshii)s  at  State  Fairs.  American  Royal  and  Chicago  inter- 
national Live  Slock  Exposition.  This  great  Hereford  bull  was  exhib- 
ited by  Overton  Harris,  the  Model  P^arm,  Harris,  Mo. 


FIVE  FAMOUS  SHOW  MTLES  RAISED  L\  THE  VICINITY  OF 
Fl'LTON,  MO.  Champions  of  many  show  rings.  From  photograph 
furnished  by  .Mr.  G.  S.  Maddox,  of  the  Horse  and  Mule  Market  a,t  the 
Natioual  Stock  Yards,  Illinois. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


THE  PEERLESS  MAUD  S. — On  July  13th,  1885,  at  Cleveland. 
Ohio,  in  her  fourteenth  year,  she  reduced  the  mile  trotting  record  to 
2:08%,  which  record  remained  supreme  for  six  years.  From  a  copy- 
right photograph  by  Schreiber  &  Sons,  Art  Photographers,  Phila- 
delphia, Pa.      She  was  driven  by  W.  W.  Bair. 


SiCNAL  OF  MAPLE  CJROVE,  (i,940 — AYRSHIRE  BULL.  Im- 
ported and  owned  by  W.  P.  Schanck,  of  Avon,  N.  Y.  Chami)ion  of  the 
breed  at  the  New  York  State  Fair,  Michigan  State  Fair  and  St.  Louis 
Fair,  1903. 


190  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


m 

{ 

BETSY  DE  VOUKlJi:  !.\IJ'Uin"EL)  BELCIAX  MAIU:.  Firsl-prize 
winner  in  three-year-old  class  and  grand  champion  Belgian  mare, 
International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  Chicago,  1911.  Imported  by 
J.  Crouch  &  Son,  Lafayette,  Jnd. 


SARCASTIC  LAD--H0LSTE1X-FR1ESIAX  BULL.  Bred  by  the 
Michigan  Agricultural  College  and  exhibited  by  the  World's  I'^air 
Tlolstein  Association.  Grand  champion  bull  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase 
Exposition,  1904.  Afterwards  at  head  of  the  Illinois  Agricultural  Col- 
lege Holsteiu  herd. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


191 


ZAZA,  24,618 — PERCHERON  MARE.  Bred,  owned  and  exhib- 
ited bj'  J.  W.  &  J.  C.  Robinson,  of  Towanda,  Kansas.  Winner  of  first 
prize  for  mare  four  years  and  over  and  grand  champion  Percheron 
mare,  any  age,  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition,  1904. 


DOLLY  DLMPLES  MAY  KING  OF  LANGWATER — GUERNSEY 
BULL.  Dropped  February  15,  1307.  Champion  by  inheritance  and 
already  sire  of  promising  and  performing  heifers.  He  was  sired  by 
Imp.  King  of  the  May,  dam  Dolly  Dimple.  Bred  by  Langwater  Farms, 
North  Easton,  Mass.,  F.  L.  Ames,  Proprietor, 


192 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


NETHER  BAROX  -  IMPORTED  CLYDESDALE  STALLION'. 
First  in  class  and  chanii)ion  at  the  New  York  State  Fair,  Utl  1  :  same 
at  the  New  England  Fair,  and  won  championshi])  as  best  stallion  of 
all  draft  breeds.  Exhibited  by  Blythewood  Farms,  Pittsfield,  Mass., 
John  Buckler,  Sujierintendent. 


CEREMONIOUS  ARCHER— SHORTHORN  BULL.  Champion  cr 
his  breed  in  the  show  ring.s  of  1903.  Great  competition  had  he  at  all 
times,  but  in  the  sui)renie  hour  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock 
Exposition  he  was  i>ronounced  the  best  Shorthorn  bull  of  the  year. 
The  illustration  herewith  is  taken  from  a  photograph  api)roved  by  the 
owner,  Mr.  F.  W.  Harding,  of  Waukesha,  Wis.  CEREMONIOUS 
ARCHER  was  sold  for  $5,000  to  Col:  F.  O.  Lowden,  of  Oregon.  111. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


19' 


VICE  COMMODORE,  2:11 — TROTTING  STALLION,  BY  BINGEN, 
2:061/4.  VICE  COMMODORE  is  developing  as  a  worthy  son  of  his 
illustrious  sire,  and  by  some  is  regarded  as  the  handsomest  horse  in 
the  world.      Photograph  taken  as  a  colt  without  record. 


PEDRO,  3,187,  AT  TEN  YEARS  OLD— JERSEY  BULL.  One  of 
the  great  sires  of  the  breed.  Sweepstakes  Jersey  bull  at  the  Chicago 
Columbian  Exposition;  also  headed  champion  herd.  Owned  by  T.  S. 
Cooper,  of  Coopersburg,  Pa. 


104  TFIE    BOOK   OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


"BUCANEER"— CHAMPION  HACKNEY  SADDLE  GELDING. 
Owned  by  Henry  Fairfax,  of  Loudoun  county,  Virginia.  Photo  by 
Sclireiber,   Philadelphia,   Pa. 


LUCINDA'S  BOY—AYRSHIRE  BULL.  Grand  champion  of  the 
breed  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition.  St.  Louis,  1904.  Bred 
and  exhibited  by  Wm.  Lindsay,  of  Plainfield,  N.  J. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  195 


JOHN  A.  McKERRON.  2:041/^ — FAMOUS  TROTTING  STALLION 
BY  NUTWOOD  WILKES,  2:161.^.  Owned  by  Mr.  H.  K.  Devereux,  of 
Cleveland,  Ohio.  From  copyright  photograph  by  Schreiber  &  Sons, 
Art  Photographers,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


CAR-LOAD  OF  CHAMPION  SHORTHORN  YEARLIN«,o  -^icL.i>. 
RAISED  AND  FED  BY  W.  F.  HERRIN,  OF  BUFFALO,  ILL.  The 
fifteen  steers  averaged  1,227  pounds,  and  were  sold  by  Harpole,  Shlnn 
&  Fry  at  $7.20  per  100  pounds.  Exhibited  at  the  Chicago  Interna- 
tional Live  Stock  Exposition,  1902. 


196 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


TOPSY- A    MTLE.      At   the    Kansas   City 
the   champion   paii    of  mules  was  exhibited   by 
Platte  City,  Mo.      They  were  both  magnificent 
16.3  hands  high,  and  weighing  3,200  pounds, 
blue   ribbons    in    two   years.     The   best   mule, 


\  nil  I  I  :-  I .  '  >  al  Show 
Mr.  \Vm.  A.  Elgin,  of 
animals,  fiye  years  old. 
They  had  won  fourteen 
any   age,   was   TOPSY. 


This  same  TOPSY  was  also  champion  of  the  American  Royal  of  1905. 


JERSEY  VENTURE— JERSEY  COW.  A  famous  beauty  of  the 
Jersey  breed.  JERSEY  VENTURE  was  imported  from  the  Island  of 
Jersey  in  1895  by  Mr.  John  E.  Robbins,  of  Greensburg,  Indiana.  She 
was  a  very  fine  cow,  and  for  two  years  was  a  constant  Avinner  at  the 
Fairs.  Among  her  victories  was  sweepstakes  at  the  Omaha  lOxposition, 
in  1898.  At  this  same  Fair,  her  son.  Venture's  Lad,  also  won  sweep- 
gtakes  in  his  class;  that  is,  for  bulls  uu(ier  two  years  of  age. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  197 


PRIZE-WINNING  FOUR-HORSE  DRAFT  TEAM  EXHIBITED  AT 
THE  CHICAGO  INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION,  1901. 
Owned  by  Swift  &  Company. 


HAMPSHIRE  DOWN  SHEEP— FIRST-PRIZE  RAM  AT  BUENOS 
AYRES,  IN  SOUTH  AMERICA.  Cut  by  courtesy  of  United  States 
Department  of  Agriculture,  from  Bicknell  Bulletin,  No.  48,  Bureau  qJ 
Animal  Industry. 


198  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SPORTS    OF    THE    TIMES — FAMOUS    SADDLE    HORSE.      Prize 
winner  at  Eastern  Horse  Shows.      From  a  photo  by  Schreiber. 


FAIR  QUEEN — SHORTHOR?<r  FEMALE.  Two-year-old  heifer. 
Bred  by  H.  K.  Fairburn,  of  Thedford,  Ontario,  Canada,  and  exhibited 
by  E.  W.  Bowen,  of  Delphi,  Ind.  Winner  of  many  great  prizes  and 
grand  champion  Shorthorn  female  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposi* 
tion,  1904, 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  199 


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CHAPPIE — CHAMPION      HEAVY-WEIGHT      HUNTER.      Highly 
representative  of  this  great  breed  of  horses. 


GRAN])  CHAMPION  CAR-LOAD  OP  BEEF  STEERS  AT  THE 
CHICAGO  INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION,  1907.  Fed 
by  Claus  Krambeck,  of  Marine,  Iowa. 


200  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


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FAVORITE,  70,281  (87,784)  —  PERCHERON  STALLION. 
Champion  at  several  State  Fairs,  the  last  being  the  Missouri  State  Fair 
of  1911.  Exhibited  by  Gregory  Farm,  W.  S.  Corsa,  Proprietor,  White- 
hall, Illinois. 


TEXAS  HEREFORD  RAISED  YEARLING  STEERS — MARKET 
CHAMPIONS.  Averaging  998  pounds.  Fed  and  marketed  by  J.  W. 
Cook  &  Son,  of  Beeville,  Texas.  They  were  sold  by  Clay,  Robinson  & 
Co.,  at  Fort  Worth,  Texas,  at  $7.10  per  100  pounds,  on  January  1."), 
1912,  then  the  highest  price  for  top  cattle  in  eighteen  months. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


JERSEY  BELLE  OF  SCITUATE.  7,828— JERSEY  COW.  One  of 
the  most  famous  of  the  Jersey  family.  Record,  25  pounds  3  ounces  of 
butter  in  one  week  and  705  pounds  of  butter  in  one  year.  Owned  by 
C.  O.  Elms,  of  Scituate,  Mass.  From  a  copyright  photograph  by 
Schrelber,  1881,  by  permission. 


TIOOD  FARM  TORONO — FAUuVn  ..r.ixSEY  BULL.  Has  six  or 
more  daughters  in  register  of  merit.  Owned  by  Hood  Farm,  Lowell, 
Massachusetts. 


202  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


GEORGE  WJLKES,  2-22,  BY  HAMBLETOXJ  A\,  lu— GREAT 
SIRE  OF  TROTTERS.  From  a  copyright  photograph  by  permission 
of  Schreiber  &  Sons,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


UPLAND  lini;i;v  fVllOWX  SWISS  BT'LL.  Grand  champion  bull 
of  his  breed  at  tlie  Louisiana  I'urchase  Ex]Josition,  St.  Louis,  1904. 
Exhibited  by  F.  R.  Hazard,  of  Syracuse.  N.  Y.  At  four  years  old 
UPLAND  HOBBY  weighed  2,300  pounds. 


THE    BOOK    OF   LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


203 


204 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


! 


7.  ^t^^^^^aki 


DOLLY  DniPL]-:     r;ri:ivXSEV  row  .vv  head  of  the  breed. 

Record  for  one  year,  at  two  yeais,  14, uuy.  lo  ijouuds  milk,  703.36 
pounds  butter-fat;  record  at  3 1^  years,  18,4.58.8  pounds  milk,  906.89 
pounds  butter-fat;  record  at  five  years,  18,808.5  pounds  milk,  876.34 
pounds  butter-fat.  Holds  world's  record  for  a  two-year-old,  all 
breeds;  also  world's  record  for  a  3  % -year-old,  all  breeds.  Bred  and 
owned  at  Langwater  Farms,  North  Easton,]\Iass.,  F.L.Ames, Proprietor. 


ROAN  SULTAN — SHORTHORN  BULL.  Reserve  champion  at 
Chicago  Live  Stock  Exposition  of  1910  and  senior  champion  1911. 
Exhibited  by  Thos.  Johnson  &  Son,  Columbus,  Ohio, 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  205 


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MAJOR  DELMAR. — World's  trotting  records:  Half-mile,  0:59y2; 
one  and  one-eighth  miles,  2:22%;  fastest  gelding  at  the  time,  one 
mile,  1:59%. 


iimd. 


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THIN-RIND  BARROWS— SHOWN  AT  THE  CHICAGO  INTER- 
NATIONAL LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION,  1903.  BY  JOHN  GOODWINE, 
OF  POTOMAC,  ILL.  About  eighteen  months  old,  averaging  493 
pounds.  First  prize  for  five  barrows  weighing  over  3  50  pounds.  One 
of  these  hogs  won  first  prize  in  slaughter  contest  and  championship 
over  all  ages  and  breeds  in  the  show.  Weighed  480  pounds  on  foot 
and  dressed  430  pounds. 


20G 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


HETIDE — CHAMPION   JACK   AT   THE   ILLINOIS   STATE    FAIR 
OF  1910.      Exhibited  by  Coulter  &  Shuff,  New  Berlin.  111. 


EXPRESS  BOY  —  POLAND-CHINA  BOAR.  Two  years  old. 
Weight,  600  pounds.  Owned  by  H.  Wisely  &  Son,  of  Grover  Hill, 
Ohio.     First-prize  winner  at  the  St.  Louis  and  other  Fairs,  1903. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


207 


PRINCE  ALERT,  1 :  59 1/2— FASTEST  PACING  GELDING. 
World's  half-mile  pacing  record  in  a  lace,  0:57%.  From  copyright 
picture  by  Schreiber  &  Sons,  Art  Photographers,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


ROSE  OP  LANGWATER — GUERNSEY  HEIFER.  Year's  record 
as  a  2%-year-old:  12,966.5  pounds  milk,  669.89  pounds  butter-fat. 
World's  record  for  this  age.  Owned  by  Langwater  Farms,  North 
Easton,  Mass.,  F.  L.  Ames,  Proprietor. 


208  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPION'S. 


«*     % 


JOi;  V      ■-■liM.,     I'.v      |-.\T(M1EX     WH.KES — FAMOl'S 

PACIXC;  STALLION.  Sire  of  the  ijhenonienal  DAN  PATCH,  liTjoVi. 
the  chaiDpion  light-harness  horse.  From  copyright  photograph  by 
Schreiber  <fe  Sons,  oi'  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


STAR  POlNTEli,  l::.!tVi,  P.Y  P.ilOWN  IIAL.  The  lir.sl  piuer  to 
reduce  the  record  below  the  two-rninute  mark.  From  a  copyright 
photograph  by  Schreiber  &  Sons,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  209 


JUPITEK.  .  s.:(  ii'  -BELGIAN  STALLION.  Photograph  \\  ab  ictken 
at  the  Minnesota  State  Fair,  1911,  where  he  was  champion;  also  first 
in  class  and  champion  at  Illinois  State  Fair.  1911.  Exhibited  by  Finch 
Bros.,  Verona,  111.      "A  massive  roan  and  outstanding  winner." 


THE  MEDDLER— POLAND-CHINA  BOAR.  Under  one  year  old. 
Grand  champion  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition,  1904.  Exhib- 
ited by  Winn  &  Mastin,  of  Mastin,  Kansas. 


210 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


ZEBROID  LORDELLO — ONE  VKAK  OLIt,  olT  (»F  Till-:  AlAKl-: 
STAEL  BY  THE  ZEBRA  CANON.  This  illustralioii  is  issued  by  cour- 
tesy of  the  Cnited  States  Department  of  Agriculture  and  taken  from 
the  Annual  Report  of  the  Bureau  of  Animal  Industry,  1898.  The 
picture  was  sent  to  the  United  States  Department  of  Agriculture  by 
Baron  de  Parana,  of  Rio  de  Janeiro,  Brazil.  The  zebroid  is  the  result 
of  a  cross  of  the  zebra  with  the  common  mare. 


■M[;i  \      CI  I  ivSTi-:!;  sow,     a  \  >':irlii:.u,.  w-  '  pounds. 

()\MH:-d  by  1'.  D.  Uuuiben,  oL  Xashua,  iowa.  l'"irsL-iii  i/.t-  uud  sweep- 
stakes winner  in  1903  at  Missouri,  Iowa,  Kansas  and  Nebraska  State 
Fairs,  also  at  the  Great  St.  Louis  Fair. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


211 


EVALINE,  2d,  OF  AVOXDALE — GALLOWAY  COW.  Prize- 
winning  female  at  many  shows.  Senior  champion  at  the  Cliicago 
International  Live  Stock  E.xposition  of  1904.  and  grand  champion  of 
the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition.  Weight  at  two  years  and  four 
months,  1,61.")  pounds.  Exhibited  by  C.  N.  Moody,  of  Atlanta.  Mo. 
EVALINE,  2d,  OF  AVONDALE  was  also  grand  champion,  American 
Royal,   1905. 


WORTHY,  3d— GALLOWAY  BULL.  Winner  of  many  premiums, 
including  championship  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Expo- 
sition, and  grand  champion  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition, 
1904.     Exhibited  by  C.  E.  Clarke,  of  St.  Cloud,  Minn. 


212  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


METEOR— SADDLE   HORSE.    SHOW   RINGS   OF    1902.      Owned 
by  Mr.  Stanton  Elliott,  of  New  York.     Winner  of  many  ribbons. 


BLACKBIRD,  26th — ABERDEEN-ANGUS  COW.  A  prize  winner 
at  all  State  Shows  and  grand  champion  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase 
Exposition,  1904.  "She  is  a  heifer  of  beautiful  character,  amply 
grown,  thick  in  her  flesh,  smooth  along  the  back  and  finely  finished." 
Exhibited  by  C.  J.  Martin,  of  Churdan,  Iowa. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


213 


LANDSEER'S  FANCY,  2,876— JERSEY  COW.  A  great  member 
of  the  Jersey  breed.  Record,  93  6  pounds  of  butter  in  one  year. 
Owned  by  W.  J.  Webster,  of  Columbia,  Tenn.  This  picture  is  from  a 
photograph  taken  by  Schreiber,  of  Pliiladelphia,  1883. 


CHOICE  GOODS,  186,802 — GRAND  CHAMPION  SHORTHORN 
BULL.  The  grand  champion  Shorthorn  bull  at  the  St.  Louis  World's 
Fair  was  CHOICE  GOODS,  186,802.  He  was  also  champion  at  many 
other  great  Fairs  and  Expositions.  Exhibited  by  the  Tebo  Land  and 
Cattle  Company,  of  Clinton,  Mo.  CHOICE  GOODS  was  calved  April 
21,  1899,  and  the  picture  was  taken  at  the  World's  Fair  Grounds, 
September,  1904. 


214  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


ANTELOPE — CHAMPION      HEAVY-WEIGHT      HUNTER,      H)U; 
Owned  by  W.  Hinkle  Smith,  of  Bryn  Mawr,  Pa. 


PRIME  LAD.  119,115— GRAND  CHAMPION  HEREFORD  BULL. 
The  grand  champion  Hereford  bull  at  the  Cattle  Show  of  the  Louis- 
iana Purchase  Exposition.  He  was  also  champion  of  the  Hereford 
breed  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1903. 
Exhibited  by  W.  S.  Van  Natta  &  Son,  of  Fowler,  Ind.  This  picture  of 
PRIME  LAD  was  taken  at  the  World's  Fair,  1904. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


215 


TROTTING  STALLION— CARMOJSJ,  32,917.  The  first  sire  selected  for 
use  in  the  experiments  of  the  Department  of  Agriculture  to  develop  an 
American  breed  of  carriage  horses.  CARMON  is  a  bay  with  black  points 
and  no  white  markings,  sixteen  hands  high,  and  weighing  1,200  pounds  in 
fair  condition.  Bred  by  Hon.  Norman  J.  Colman,  of  St.  Louis,  Mo.  This 
illustration  is  used  by  courtesy  of  the  U.  S.  Department  of  Agriculture,  and 
is  from  Year  Book  for  1904. 


216 


THE    BOOK    OP^    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


REX  DEN.MAKK.  JH. — BLACK  STALLION.  Owned  by  Arthur 
W.  Koon,  of  Onarga,  HL  Handsome  black  stallion,  with  star  in  face, 
15%  hands  high.  Sired  by  Rex  Denmark,  840,  and  tracing  back  in 
four  generations  to  the  famous  Black  Hawk.  REX  DENMARK,  JR., 
was  shown  in  1902  in  great  company,  winning  several  first  prizes  and 
championships. 


HILLDALE  CHIEF,  52,645 — BERKSHIRE  BOAR.  Owned  by 
Thos.  Teal  &  Son,  of  Utica,  Iowa.  Weighed  800  pounds  when  exhib- 
ited as  a  two-year-old.  Won  first  prizes  at  seven  State  Fairs  and 
sweepstakes  at  four  State  Fairs  in  1901. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  217 


CHARMILLE,  42,128  (64.550) — GRAND  CHAMPION  PERCH- 
ERON  MARE  AT  INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION,  AS 
THREE-YEAR-OLD,  CHICAGO,  1907.  Imported  by  Croucli  &  Son 
and  owned  by  Holland  Stock  Farm,  Springfield,  Mo. 


MARGARET — FAMOUS   HEREiUKD   TEAlALi.,   ..^   ..   .iEIFER. 
One  of  the  great  show  cows  of  recent  years.     See  also  page  124. 


218 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


PRINCE  ITO,  2d— ABERDEEN-ANGUS  BULL.  Winner  of  many 
sweepstakes  and  championship  prizes.  Was  grand  champion  at  the 
Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition,  1004.  "He  is  'nuggety'  all  over  and 
the  finish  is  at  both  ends  and  in  the  middle.  The  back  withstands 
critical  examination,  while  the  buttocks  will  raise  a  man's  estimation 
of  round  steak."      Exhibited  by  C.  J.  Martin,  of  Churdan,  Iowa. 


M 


FARM  WORK   TEAM — THE   REAL  THING.      Photograph   taken 
at  high  noon  by  Eugene  J.  Hall,  Oak  Park,  Hlinois. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


219 


McAfee  if'ey, 


DAN  PATCH,  1:55 — CHAMPION  LIGHT-HARNESS  HORSE  OF 
THE  WORLD.  Bred  by  Dan  A.  Messnei-,  Jr.,  of  Oxford,  Ind.  Owned 
by  M.  W.  Savage,  of  Minneapolis,  Minn.  World's  pacing  records: 
One  mile,  1:55;  half  mile,  0:56;  mile  to  wagon,  1:57%;  two  miles, 
4:17;  also  many  other  records.  From  copyright  photo  by  permission 
of  Schreiber  &  Sons,  Art  Photographers,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


FOLIE— BROWN  SWISS  COW.  Senior  and  grand  champion 
female  of  the  Brown  Swiss  breed  at  the  National  Dairy  Show,  Chicago, 
1907.     Exhibited  by  F.  R.  Hazard,  of  Syracuse,  N,  Y, 


220 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


MODJESKA,  2.1114  — FIJKXCll   COACH   .M.\l;i;.      '     :  -ii  at  the 

Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1903.      Bred  and  exhib- 
ited by  Dunham,  Fletcher  &  Coleman,  Oaklawn  Farm,  Wayne,  111. 


GOLDEN  FERNS  LAD — IMPORTED  JERSEY  BULL.  The 
highest  price  of  the  year  1903  for  a  Jersey  bull  was  $2,250,  paid  for 
GOLDEN  FERN'S  LAD,  imported  by  Mr.  F.  S.  Peer  and  purchased  by 
Mr.  T.  S.  Cooper  at  auction. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  221 


ORNAMENT — THOROUGHBRED  STALLION.  This  horse  was 
selected  bv  Kentucky  breeders  to  represent  the  interests  of  the  Blue 
Grass  region  at  the  St.  Louis  World's  Fair,  19  04,  as  combining  all  the 
qualities  which  make  a  Thoroughbred  great,  including  beauty. 
ORNAIMEXT  was  the  grand  champion  Thoroughbred  of  the  show.  He 
was  the  best  two,  three  and  four-year-old  of  his  years,  winner  of  four 
Derbies  and  sixteen  other  races,  retiring  sound.  Exhibited  by  H.  P. 
Headley,  of  Lexington,  Kentucky. 


LADY  OF  ^lEADOWBROOK— CHAMPION  ABERDEEN-ANGUS 
COW  OF  THE  CHICAGO  INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSI- 
TION, 1900.  Exhibited  by  D.  Bradfute  &  Son.  of  Cedarville,  Ohio. 
This  was  a  famous  cow  in  her  day. 


222 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


The  group  of  five  imported  Percheron  stallions,  "IMPRECATION," 
79,304:  ILDEFONSE,  79,307;  INEDIT,  79,316;  ISMAIL,  79,30.j; 
INTELLIGENT,  79,330;  that  won  the  special  prize  offered  by  the 
French  government  for  the  best  five  animals,  either  sex,  at  the  inter- 
national Live  Stock  Show,  in  Chicago,  December,  1911.  "IMPRECA- 
TION," the  grand  champion  Percheron  stallion,  is  the  first  horse  at  the 
left  of  the  picture.  Exhibited  by  J.  Crouch  &  Son,  Proprietors, 
Lafayette,  Indiana. 


mgd 


IMPERIAL  YEOMAN— OXFORD  DOWN  RAM.  An  unbeaten 
English  show  ram;  also  first-prize  winner  at  many  American  State 
Fairs,  and  first  in  the  two-year-old  class  at  Chicago,  1901.  Owned  by 
Geo.  McKerrow  &  Sou.  of  Pewaukee,  Wisconsin. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  223" 

n 


LORETTA  ]).  -CHAMPION  BUTTER  COW.  In  the  World's  Fair 
Dairy  Contest,  so  far  as  economical  milk  and  butter  production  are 
concerned,  the  champion  cow  was  the  Jersey  LORETTA  D.  In  the 
120  days  this  cow  gave  5,082.  pounds  of  milk  4.8  per  cent,  fat,  yield- 
ing 280.16  pounds  of  butter-fat,  equal  to  330.04  pounds  of  merchant- 
able butter.  Owned  by  the  estate  of  W.  S.  Ladd,  of  Portland,  Oregon. 
Was  bred  by  Moore  &  Gilbert,  of  Muncie,  Indiana. 


GUERNSEY  CHAMPION,  8,218 — GRAND  CHAMPION  GUERN- 
SEY BULL  AT  THE  ST.  LOUIS  WORLD'S  FAIR.  Bred  by  H.  McK. 
Twombley,  of  Florham  Farms,  Madison,  N.  J.  This  picture  of 
GUERNSEY  CHAMPION  was  taken  at  the  Fair,  September,  1904.  He 
was  calved  November  15th,  1901. 


THE    BOOK    OF    IJVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


CALYPSO,  2:., 017  (44,577) — A  CHAMFIOX  Oi-'  C'i  i  AM  PIO.NS. 
His  get  have  won  first  prize  in  "get-of-slre"  group  thirty-nine  times, 
without  a  single  defeat.  He  sired  the  highest-price  Percheron  mare 
Jolanthe,  that  sold  at  public  auction  for  $3, .500. 00.  See  page  1G9. 
CALYPSO  is  the  i)roperty  of  H.G. McMillan  &  Sons,  Rock  Rapids,  Iowa. 


ABERDEEN-ANGUS  CATTLE— WINNING  GRADED  HERD  AT 
THE  ILLINOIS  STATE  FAIR.  1905.  Owned  by  W.  A.  McHenry,  of 
Denison,  Iowa. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  225 


TIGKR  Ln.Y — HACKNEY  STALLION.  Owned  and  exhibited  by 
Reginald  Vanderbilt.  At  Pl'iladelphia,  1905,  tiie  prize  for  the  best 
Anierican-loaled  Hackney  stallion  from  imported  sire  and  dam  was 
awarded  to  TIGER  LILY.    He  has  since  become  famous  in  show  rings. 


COLSTON  ECLIPSE — YORKSHIRE  BOAR.  Yearling.  Grand 
champion  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition,  1904.  Exhibited^^by 
W.  E.  Rockhill,  of  Etna  Green,  Indiana. 


226  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


ORPHAN  BOY — THE  FAMOUS  CHAMPION  JACK.  At  the 
Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition,  1904,  the  grandest  show  of  jacks  and 
jennets  ever  seen  in  the  history  of  the  vorld  was  exhibited.  The  firm 
of  L.  M.  IMonsees  &  Son,  of  Smithton,  IMo.,  received  a  majority  of  the 
awards  in  this  class.  One  of  tliese  grand  championships  was  won  by 
ORPHAN  BOY.  who  is  the  subject  of  our  ilhist ration.  This  i)icture 
was  taken  out  in  the  pasture  when  ORPHAN  BOY  was  not  in  show- 
ring  condition.  ORPHAN  BOY'  was  foaled  June  4th,  1889;  is  black 
with  white  points:   1  (i  hands  high,  and  weighs  1,200  pounds. 


jjac  ul.\  j:.\.\i  .\.\!j  i-;\\  !•: 

LOUIS   WORLD'S   FAIR,    1904. 
field,  Ontario,  Canada. 


(ilL\.\U   C'lL\AiriU.\.S   AT    lili.    .-L. 
Exhibited  by  J.  T.   Gibson,  of  Den- 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


227 


AUION,  2:07% — BAY  TROTTING  STALLION.  Sold  at  three 
years  old  for  $125,000  to  Malcolm  P'orbes,  of  Boston,  Mass.;  the 
highest  price  ever  paid  for  a  trotting  horse.  Held  the  world's  cham- 
pionship record  for  two-year-olds,  2:10%.  Bought  by  M.  W.  Savage, 
of  Minneapolis,  Minnesota. 


MAPLE  LEAF  SHADELAND,  9th — HEREFORD  BULL.  Grand 
champion  Hereford  bull  in  quarantine  division  at  the  Louisiana  Pur- 
chase Exposition,  1904.  Exhibited  by  Campbell  Russell,  of  Hereford, 
Indian  Territory,  uow  the  state  of  Oklahoma. 


228  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


CRESCEUS,  2:02^4 — WAS  FASTEST  TROTTING  STALLION. 
Fastest  two  miles.  4:17.  Fastest  first  heat  in  a  race,  2:03^.  From 
copyright   photo  liy  jiei mission  of  Schreiber  &  Sons.   Philadelphia,  Pa. 


l'Ut,rT\      1M':T       DIOVON    cow.       Imi-sI    in  i...      ..Mil:.;     .1.     ihr     I'an 
American    Siiow    and     Exposition,     I'.toi.      Owned    and    e.xliibited     by 
James  Hilton  &  Son,  of  New  Scotl9,n(J,  N.  Y. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  229 


NEWS  BOY — LIGHT-HARNESS  HORSE.  At  the  Brooklyn  Horse 
fhow,  1905,  he  v/on  every  prize  shown  for,  and  at  Philadelphia  also 
made  a  great  record.  Exhibited  by  Mrs.  J.  B.  Gerken,  of  Long 
Island,  New  York. 


YOUNG  PREMIER  CHIEF— BERKSHIRE  BOAR,  THREE  YEARS 
OLD.  Champion  at  the  Illinois  State  Fair,  1905.  Exhibited  by  I.  N. 
P?irker  &  Sons,  of  Thornton,  Indiana. 


230 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


FOREST  KING  —  HACKNEY  HORSE.  Imported,  sensational, 
high-stepping  Hackney  that  won  the  gig  prize  and  the  harness  cham- 
])ionship  at  the  Philadelphia  Horse  Show,  190.'.;  also  won  the  Wal- 
dorf-Astoria Cup  in  1904  at  New  York.  Owned  and  driven  by  Judge 
W.  H.  Moore,  of  Sew  York  City. 


CLARAS  Olil'liAN  (IKAXD  CHAMPION  JERSEY  BULL  AT 
THE  ILLINOIS  STATE  FAIR,  1905;  ALSO  AT  INDIANA,  Exhibited 
by  A.  P.  Walker,  of  RushvjUe,  Indiana, 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  231 


THE  EEL — A  PACING  STALLION.  His  records:  Mile  track, 
2:021/4;  half-mile  track,  2:04%;  world's  record  half-mile  track  on 
ice,  2:111/2,  Ottawa,  Ontario,  February,  1909:  quarter-mile  sod  track, 
2:13,  Woodstock,  Ont.,  October  30,  1911.  THE  EEL  was  the  holder 
of  record  for  three  heats  in  a  race  for  a  stallion  until  the  summer  of 
1911.      Owned  by  F.  W.  Entricken,  Tavistock,  Ontario,  Canada. 


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EPH,  12,79l'  —  FA.MCK'S  RFA)  POLLEJJ  SIRE  AND  SHOW  BULL. 
Five  times  champion  and  four  times  grand  champion  at  principal 
State  Fairs,  1909.  EPH  is  sire  of  Elgin,  14,964,  winner  of  many 
prizes,  including  five  grand  championships.  Exhibited  by  Geo.  In- 
eichen  &  Sons,  Apple  Grove  Farm,  Geneva,  Ind. 


232  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


CROFTJANE  DTNAH,  19th— IMPORTED  AYRSHIRE  COW, 
FIVE  YEARS  AND  ELEVEN  MONTHS  OLD.  Highly  representative 
of  the  breed.  Senior  and  grand  champion  Ayrshire  cow  at  the 
National  Dairy  Show  held  at  Chicago,  1907.  Exhibited  by  W.  F. 
Schanck,  of  Avon,  New  York. 


SUCCESS— MERINO  RAINI.  Champion  of  the  breed  at  the  Inter- 
national Live  Stock  Exposition  of  1882.  Photograph  by  Schreiber  & 
Sons,  Art  Photographers,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  233 


FIGGIS — JERSEY  COW.  At  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition, 
the  grand  champion  Jersey  cow  was  FIGGIS,  76,106.  This  applies  to 
the  exhibition  of  Jersey  cattle,  and  not  to  the  milking  and  butter- 
making  contest.  FIGGIS  had  a  calf  at  the  World's  Fair.  FIGGIS 
combines  beauty  with  great  dairy  capacity.  FIGGIS  was  bred  on  the 
Hood  Farm,  Lowell,  Mass.,  and  was  sold  to  Mr.  Thomas  W.  Lawson, 
owner  of  Ureamwood  Farm,  Scituate,  Mass.,  and  by  him  was  exhib- 
ited at  the  World's  Fair.  The  picture  of  FIGGIS  was  taken  at  the 
rime  when  she  was  declared  the  grand  champion. 


J.  F.'S  MODEL,  82,788  — GRAND  CHAMPION  DUROC-JERSEY 
SOW  AT  THE  TRI-STATE  FAIR  AT  MEMPHIS,  AT  KNOXVILLE, 
NASHVILLE  AND  MONTGOMERY,  ALA.,  IN  1911.  Owned  by 
Wilder  Carpenter,  Grand  View  Farm,  Marmaduke,  Arkansas. 


234 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


DR.  >;Kh\\().\lv  A  \ir'lX)Kl.\  HiJUSI-:.  (Jwned  and  exhibited 
by  Reginald  Vanderbilt.  First-prize  winner  at  tlie  Philadelphia  Horse 
Show,  1905,  and  a  constant  winner  wherever  shown.  DR.  SFLWOXK 
was  16.1  hands  and  seven  years  old. 


I.  S.  PERFECTIO.X -^inji..VAU-i  iilAA  ;bu\\.  i  wo  years  oid. 
Senior  grand  champion  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition,  1904. 
Exhibited  by  S.  E.  Sli«lleuburger,  of  Camden,  Ohig. 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


235 


McKTNLEY — HACKNEY  STALLION.  Champion  at  the  London 
Hackney  Show,  and  the  best  Hackney  stallion  at  the  Philadelphia 
Horse  Show  of  190.5,  and  winning  many  other  honors  later.  Exhib- 
ited by  Eben  D.  Jordan,  of  Boston,  Mass. 


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CALLAWAY'S  PRIDE— CHESTER  WHITE  PIG.  Age,  175 
days;  weight,  2  7-5  pounds.  Winner  of  seven  first  prizes,  including 
champion  and  grand  championship  at  the  Missouri  State  Fair,  1911. 
Exhibited  by  Nunnelly  Bros.,  Readsville,  Missouri. 


236 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


FRONTON — GRAND  CHAMPION  PERCHERON  STALLION.  The 
grand  champion  Percheron  stallion  of  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposi- 
tion, 1904.  Imported  from  France  as  a  yearling  and  raised  in  this 
country  by  McLaughlin  Bros.,  of  Columbus,  Ohio.  FRONTON  weighed 
2,040  pounds  at  the  Exposition. 


CHESTER  ^VI11TE  SWINE — UNDER  TWO  YEARS  OLD.  First- 
prize  winners,  St.  Louis  Fair,  1902,  each  weighing  38.^  pounds.  Ex- 
hibited by  Dorsey  Bros.,  of  Perry,  Illinois. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  237 


LORD     BURLEIGH — HACKNEY     HORSE.      Winner     of     harness 
championships       One  of  the  greatest  of  modern  show  horses.      Owned 


By  Mr    E    D 

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PREMIER  LONGFELLOW — BERKSHIRE  BOAR.  Two  years 
old.  Grand  champion  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition,  1904. 
Exhibited  by  N.  II.  Gentry,  of  Sedalla,  Mo. 


23S 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


._K:f^         •    '^i  -•-j-t-./a'^^* 


GYPSY  QUEEN — SIRED  BY  CHESTER  DARE,  10;  DAM,  KATE. 
Bred  by  I.  M.  Dunn,  of  Bryantsville,  Kentucky.  Exhibited  by  Ball 
Bros.,  of  Versailles,  Kentucky.  Grand  champion  saddle  mare  at  the 
Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition,  St.  Louis,  1904. 


iiiUii  CLERE  COUNTESS,  19lli  .:=.--  i  CAR-OLD  BERKSlllia: 
SOW.  Champion  at  many  shows,  the  last  being  the  Illinois  State 
Fair,  1905.     Exhibited  by  Hood  Farm,  Lowell,  Mass. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


239 


DILHAM  PRIME  MINISI'ELI— CHAMPION  HACKNEY  PONY 
STALLION.  When  owned  by  Mr.  E.  D.  Jordan,  of  Chiltonville,  Mass., 
he  was  winner  in  many  show  ring  contests  and  sire  of  prize-winning  ponies. 


IDA  MARIGOLD,  .] 2, 6 15— JERSEY  COW.  Test,  25  pounds  21/2 
ounces  of  butter  in  one  week.  At  the  Chicago  World's  Fair  she  won 
first  prize  in  Test  No.  1,  sw^eepstakes  in  Test  No.  1,  first  prize  in  show 
ring's  sweepstakes  in  show  ring.  Dam  of  Noted  Stoke  Pogis  of  Pros- 
pect, 29,121,  who  leads  in  number  of  tested  daughters  in  proportion  to 
number  he  has  had.     Exhibited  by  C.  A.  Sweet,  of  East  Aurora,  N.  Y. 


240  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


LOKp  I'I,!.i  VST- -hackney  HOHS  ,  A  .mpanion  to  LORD 
Bl'RLElcili.  U)t;tilipr  niakins  a  great  canum^  team,  winning  in  ;nany 
classes  and  championships.  Owned  by  Mr.  E.  D.  .lordan,  of  Chilton- 
ville,  Massachusetts. 


ERIC,  7th,  OK  KEILLOR  PARK  -CRAXI)  CHAMPION  ABER- 
DEEN-ANOrS  BULL,  AND  INGAS  GIRL,  SENIOR  AND  GRAND 
CHAMPION  ABERI^EEX-ANGUS  COW  AT  THE  ILLINOIS  STATE 
FAIR,  1909.  Exhibited  by  A.  A.  Armstrong,  of  Camargo.  111.  At 
this  great  Fair  there  were  four  herds  e.xhibited,  all  of  them  averaging 
high  in  quality.  Other  awards  have  been  won  by  this  pair  of  Aber- 
deen-Angus champions. 


THb]    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


241 


DOLLY  BLOOM — GUERNSEY  COW,  DAM  OK  DOLLY  DIMPLE. 
Official  records,  one  year:  17,297.-5  pounds  milk,  s:^(>.2  pounds  butter- 
fat,  world'.s  record  for  Guernseys  until  1908-1909.  12,674.83 
pounds  milk,  623.94  pounds  butter-fat,  world's  butter-fat  record  for 
Guernseys  as  a  three-year-old.  8,841.58  pounds  milk,  453.86  pounds 
butter-fat,  world's  butter-fat  record  at  two  years  of  age,  19  02-1903. 
Owned  at  Langwater  Farms,  North  Easton,  Mass.,  F.L.Ames,  Proprietor. 


NOBLE  OF  OAKLANDS  -IMPORTED  .TERSEY  BULL.  Sensa- 
tional prize  winner  and  sire  of  prize  winners.  Sold  at  auction.  May 
30th,  1911,  by  T.  S.  Cooper  &  Sons,  to  J.  B.  Haggin,  Elmendorf  Stock 
Farm,  Lexington,  Ky, 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


ESMERALDA — ^FRENCH  COACH  MARE.  Although  twelve  years 
old  and  suckling  a  colt,  was  declared  grand  champion  at  t  lie  T>oui?iana 
Purchase  Exposition,  1904.  Picture  taken  in  pasture.  Exhibited  by 
E.  M.  Barton,  of  Hinsdale,  Illinois. 


SULTAX— GRAND  CHAMPION  ANGORA  BUCK  AT  THE 
LOl'lSIANA  ri'RCHASE  EXPOSITION,  1904.  Exhibited  by  C.  P. 
Bailey  &  Sons,  San  Jose,  California.  Illustration  by  courtesy  of  th« 
United  States  Department  of  Agriculture. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


LETTY  LEE  AND  LEONORA  —  A  TEAM  OF  ROADSTERS. 
Owned  by  C.  W.  Watson,  of  Baltimore,  Md.  Blue-ribbon  winners  at 
Eastern  Shows,  and  considered  the  handsomest  pair  of  roadsters  in 
five  years. 


VILLAGE  BELLE,  2d — FAMOUS  SHORTHORN  HEIFER,  AS  A 
CALF.  See  also  page  66.  For  this  photo  we  are  under  obligation  to 
John  Garden,  Cottage  Hill,  Ravenna.  Ohio. 


244 


THE    BOOK    0I<^    lAVK    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


BUZETTA— FRENCH  DRAFT  MARE.  Foaled  March.  1901; 
weight,  l,9Sii  pounds.  First-prize  three-year-old,  also  chami)ion  and 
grand  champion,  French  Draft  Class.  Louisiana  Purchase  Exi^osition. 
1904.  Owned  by  Ed.  Hodgson,  ol  El  Paso,  Illinois.  Bred  by  C.  \V. 
Hurt,  of  Arrowsmith,  Illinois. 


ITCHEN  DAISY,  3d— GUERNSEY  COW.  At  four  years  and 
seven  months  she  i)roduced  in  one  year  1?.,G3(»  pounds  milk,  ri.24  per 
cent,  fat,  equivalent  to  714.10  i)ounds  butter-fat.  Owned  by  Lang- 
water  Farms,  North  Easton,  Mass.,  F.  L,  Ames,  Proprietor. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


245 


JOLIH  JOHANNA — HOLSTEIN  COW.  She  was  bred  by  Gerritt 
Smilley,  of  Peterboro,  N.  Y.,  and  at  ten  years  old,  in  the  ninety-day 
demonstration  test  at  St.  Louis  she  gave  5,064.4  pounds  of  milk  and 
169.99  pounds  of  butter-fat,  equivalent  to  212.48  pounds  of  butter,  an 
average  daily  yield  of  2.36  pounds  of  butter.  She  was  first-prize  cow 
at  the  St.  Louis  World's  Fair,  cham])ion  senior  female  at  the  World's 
Fair,  and  grand  champion  female  of  the  Holstein  breed  at  the  same 
Fair.  Her  official  test  made  on  the  World's  Fair  Grounds  at  St.  Louis 
was  544.6  pounds  of  milk,  19.61  pounds  of  butter-fat,  the  equivalent 
of  23  pounds  and  14  ounces  of  butter  in  seven  consecutive  days. 
Owned  by  the  State  Agricultural  College  of  Colorado. 


MASHER'S  SEQUEL— IMPORTED  GUERNSEY  BULL.  Has 
twenty-seven  or  more  tested  daughters  in  Advanced  Register.  Owned 
by  Scoville  Bros.,  Chapinville,  Connecticut. 


246 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SUNOL,  2:081^ — TROTTING  MARE.  Bred  by  the  late  Gov- 
ernor Stanford,  of  Palo  Alto,  California.  Owned  by  the  late  Robert 
Bonner,  of  New  York  City.  Price  paid,  $40,000.  From  copyright 
photograph  by  permission  of  Schreiber  &  Sons,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


LADY  VIOLA — IMPORTED  JERSEY  COW.  Sold  at  auction 
May,  1911,  for  $7,000.00.  Owned  at  Elmendorf  Farm,  Lexington, 
Ky.     LADY  VIOLA  is  the  highest-priced  cow  of  the  breed. 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


247 


PRINCE  OF  WHITEHOUSE — FIRST-PRIZE  THREE-YEAR-OLD 
CLYDESDALE  STALLIOX  AT  THE  IOWA  AND  ILLINOIS  STATE 
FAIRS  AND  RESERVE  CHAMPION  IN  IOWA.  Exhibited  by  John 
Leitch,  of  Lafayette,  Illinois. 


FERN  AYR— AYRSHIRE  COW.  Record  for  one  year:  13,601 
pounds  of  milk,  3.80  per  cent,  fat,  producing  519.64  pounds  fat,  equiv- 
alent to  519.64  pounds  of  butter,  Owned  by  John  R.  Valentine,  Bryn 
Mawr,  Pennsylvania. 


248 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


^"^ "'  -"* — -H      -...j!-,-..  .■! 

i»»<tWwHfi!««»atfa,.w-- 1111.^;^,;  -  •!t»^^"ii-;iifirM  jiff 

ALIX — BY  PATRON  \(;K,  1>\.\I  15V  ATTORXEY.  Hivd  by  Daniel 
Hayes,  ol"  Muscatine,  Iowa.  Died  the  property  of  Hon.  F.  C.  Sayles,  of 
Pawtucket,  R.  I.  From  copyright  photograi)h  ])y  permission  of 
Schreiber  &  Sons,,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa.  At  Galesburg,  HI.,  in  ISH:',. 
ALIX  placed  the  mile  trotting  mark  at  2:03%.  She  was  driven  by 
Andy  McDowell. 


]iU;  .MAUV  CHESTER  ^VH1TE  SOW.  TWO  VL.vU.,  ul../. 
Grand  champion  at  the  St.  Louis  World's  Fair,  li)04.  Exhibited  by 
O.  L,  Kerr,  of  Independence,  Missouri. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


249 


LESSNESSOCK'S  FIRST  CHOICE — NOTED  IMPORTED  CHAM- 
PION AYRSHIRE  BULL.  In  service  at  Riverside  Stock  Farm. 
Owned  by  J.  F.  Converse  &  Co.,  Woodville,  New  York.  Was  senior 
and  grand  champion  at  the  Iowa  State  Fair,  1911,  and  junior  cham- 
pion at  the  National  Dairy  Show,  1909. 


LASS,  4  0th,  OF  HOOD  FARM — JERSEY  COW.  Gold-medal 
winner  in  Class  A,  1910,  ]iroducing  10,47-5  pounds  of  milk  in  one 
year,  from  which  606  pounds  of  butter  were  made.  Bred  and  owned 
by  Hood  Farm,  Lowell,  Massachusetts. 


250 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


RED  PRINCE,  II. — THOROUGHBRED  STALLION,  IRISH  TYPE. 
Used  in  service  as  sire  of  hunters  and  of  racers.  Was  winner  Chal- 
lenge cup  at  Dublin  Royal  Show  in  1903.  Illustration  by  courtesy  of 
the  United  States  Department  of  Agriculture.  From  Annual  Report 
of  the  Bureau  of  Animal  Industry,  1904. 


AUCHENBRIAN  WHITE  BEAUTY,  2d— AYRSHIRE  COW. 
Record  as  a  mature  cow  in  one  year:  13,789  pounds  of  milk,  pro- 
ducing 564.39  pounds  of  butter-fat,  equal  to  658  pounds  of  butter. 
Owned  by  Penshurst  Farm,  Narberth,  Pa. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


251 


EMILY,  835 — SADDLE  MARE.  Sweepstakes  mare,  any  a^e,  at 
the  Chicago  Columbian  Exposition,  1893.  Exhibited  by  General  J.  B. 
Castleman,  of  Louisville,  Ky.  Illustration  by  courtesy  of  the  United 
States  Department  of  A.2:riculture,  from  Report  Bureau  of  Animal 
Industry,  1902. 


EDNA— GRAND  CHAMPION  ANGORA  DOE  AT  THE  LOUISIANA 
PURCHASE  EXPOSITION,  1904.  Exhibited  by  F.  O.  Landrum, 
Laguna,  Texas.  Illustration  by  courtesy  of  the  Uuited  States  Depart- 
ment of  Agriculture. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SIR  ANDREW — IJIGllLAM)  iiL  LL.  Champion  at  the  Louisiana 
Purchase  Exposition,  1904.  Imported  and  owned  by  W.  M.  Van 
Norden,  of  Rye,  N.  Y.  illustration  by  courtesy  and  permission  of 
Hon.  James  Wilson,  Secretary  of  United  States  Agricultural  Depart- 
ment. From  an  article  on  Highland  Cattle  in  Bureau  of  Animal 
Industry  Report   for    1  !Htft. 


THE     BOOK    OK     LIVE     STOCK  CHAMPIONS.  253 


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IMPORTED  HORACE  JUNIOR — BAY  HACKNEY  PONY  STAL- 
LION OF  EXCELLENT  CONFORMATION  AND  IDEAL  ACTION. 
Winner  of  various  prizes,  including  championships  before  importation, 
and  first  at  Madison  Square  Garden,  1906  and  1910.  In  stud  at  Bel- 
thorpe  Farms,  Percy  E.  Hoge,  Proprietor,  Jett,  Ky. 


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■  FONTAL\'E-S  CHIEFTAIN— GRAND  CHAMPION  JERSEY  BULL 
AT  SHELBYVILLE,  KY.,  ALSO  AT  OHIO,  KENTUCKY  AND  ILLI- 
NOIS STATE  FAIRS  OF  19H.  Exhibited  by  Ed.  C.  Lasater,  Fal- 
furfi?i§,  Texas. 


254 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPlOiXS. 


JOHN  R.  GENTRY,  2:00V2,  BY  ASHLAND  W  ILKES — A  PACING 
CHAIMPION.  In  1896  he  reduced  the  record  a  full  second,  which  was 
])reviously  held  by  ROBERT  J.  From  copyright  photograph  by  per- 
mission of  Schreiber  &  Sons,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


MAS'n':R   ()i-  'III1-:   gkov  k     (iiwii'Ion  shorthorn  bull 

AT    THE    CHICAGO    INTERNATIONAL    LIVE    STOCK    EXPOSITION 
OF  1904.     Exhibited  by  C  P.  Bellows.  Maryville,  Mo, 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


255 


FLUCK'S  EXPECTATION — PURE-BRED  HEREFORD  STEER. 
At  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition,  1904,  this  steer  was  champion 
of  the  Hereford  breed  and  grand  champion  of  the  pure-bred  steers  at 
the  show.  At  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition  of 
1904  FLUCK'S  EXPECTATION  was  Hereford  champion  and  reserve 
grand  champion.  He  was  champion  calf  of  the  same  show  in  1903. 
Exhibited  by  H.  J.  Fluck,  of  Goodenow,  Illinois. 


DIJKSTRA  BEAUTY  LAD — HOLSTEIN  BULL.  First  and  grand 
champion  at  the  Iowa,  Wisconsin  and  Illinois  State  Fairs,  1907  and 
1909.     Exhibited  by  W.  B.  Barney  &  Sons,  Chapin,  Iowa. 


256 


THE    BOOK    OF    I.IVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


FIRH:  engine  horses. — This  is  the  team  that  was  taken  from 
Kansas  City  to  the  International  Fire  Congress  held  at  the  Paris 
Exposition  in  1900  and  won  the  world's  championshii)  prize.  Illus- 
tration by  courtesy  of  Chiei'  .J.  C.  Egner,  of  the  Fire  Department, 
Kansas  City,  Missouri. 


Sri.TA.X  8     DAKK      l'.l-.\l    1^. — CJHA.M)     (,'H.V.MFIUN  .lEKSEY 

female  at  SHELBY VILLE,  KY.,  AND  OHIO.  KENTUCKY  AND 
H.LINOIS  STATE  FAIRS,  AND  FIRST-PRIZE  THREE-YEAR-OLD 
AT  THE  NATIONAL  DAIRY  SHOW,  1911.  Exhibited  by  Ed.  C. 
Lasater,  Falfurrias,  Texas. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


257 


258  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


i\Ki.i.!-.li..M  \.\.  I  I.— 1  KivC  iiKUU.X  Si.U.lJU.N.  Foaled  in  1909. 
Black  with  large  star.  Was  champion  Percheron  stallion  at  the 
Minnesota  State  Fair,  champion  at  the  South  Dakota  State  Fair, 
champion  at  the  Sioux  City  Interstate  and  reserve  champion  at  St. 
Joseph  in  1911.  Owned  by  H.  G.  McJVIiilan  &  Sons,  Rock  Rapids. 
Iowa.      As  a  two-year-old  he  weighed  1,960  pounds. 


PEN  OF  FAT  WETHERS  -GRAND  CHAMPIONS  AT  THE 
NATIONAL  WESTERN  SHOW,  DENVER,  COLO..  1912.  Exhibited 
by  the  Agricultural  College.  Denver,  Colorado. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


259 


(()L.\.\Tl!\  !-n,s  KMIAXXA— HOLSTEIX  BULL.  Ex-world's 
cliamijiou.  Records:  JUG  yoiiuds  milk  in  one  day,  28.18  pounds 
butter-fat  in  seven  days  at  SO  per  cent.,  equivalent  to  35.22  pounds  of 
butter.  Year's  record:  27,432.5  pounds  milk,  3.64  per  cent,  fat, 
equal  to  998.26  pounds  butter-fat,  on  basis  of  butter  85.7  per  cent, 
fat,  equivalent  to  1.164.6  4  pounds  butter,  and  at  80  per  cent,  equiv- 
alent to  1,247.82  pounds  butter.  Bred  and  owned  by  W.  J.  Gillett, 
Rosendale,   Wis. 


GLENCOE'S  BOPEEP— GUERNSEY  COW.  Grand  champion  of 
the  breed  at  the  National  Dairy  Show  of  1911  and  1912.  Winner  of 
xaau7  other  prizes.     Owned  hy  W.  W.  Marsh,  Waterloo,  Iowa- 


260  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


TRAPPISTE— BELGIAN  STALLION.  Grand  champion  at  the 
Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition,  1904.  Exhibited  by  J.  Crouch  &  Son, 
of  Lafayette,  Indiana. 


^':SM^^ 


RUBY,  2d — DEVON  COW.  Senior  and  grand  champion  at 
the  New  York  State  Fair  of  1911.  Exhibited  by  W.  H.  Neal,  Propri- 
etor Hillside  Milk  Farm,  Meredith,  N.  H. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


261 


JUREUR — IMPORTED  PERCHERON  STALLION.  First-prize 
two-year-old  and  junior  champion  at  the  Chicago  International  Live 
Stock  Exposition,  1911.  Exhibited  by  Robert  Burgess  &  Son, 
Wenona,  Illinois. 


EMINENTS  RALEIGH — JERSEY  BULL.  Sire  of  thirty-five  or 
more  tested  daughters  and  sire  of  many  champion  sons,  including 
Raleigh's  Fairy  Boy,  that  Avon  grand  championship  wherever  exhib- 
ited, including  the  National  Dairy  Show  of  1910.  Owned  by  Good 
Hold  Farm,  Mentor,  Ohio,  L.  E.  Holden,  Proprietor. 


262  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


IMPRUDEXTE — IMPORTED  PERCMEROX  MARE.  First-prize 
winner  and  chami)ion  at  the  Illinois  and  Wisconsin  State  Fairs;  first 
and  reserve  champion  at  the  International  Live  Stock  Exposition, 
1910;  first-prize  winner  at  the  Illinois  and  Iowa  State  Fairs,  1911, 
and  first-prize  three-year-old  and  reserve  champion  at  the  Chicago 
International  Live  Ptock   Eximpitioii,    TM  1 


HAMPSHIRE  BARROWS— JUNIOR  YEARLINGS,  PURE-BRED. 
In  the  fat  barrow  class  they  were  reserve  grand  champions  in  contest 
for  all  breeds  at  the  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1911.  Bred 
and  exhibited  by  Patterson  &  Rouse,  Paynes  Depot.  Ky. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK  CHAMPIONS. 


263 


GLADYS  FiZZAWAY— HOLSTEIN  COW.  Ciaiid  champion 
female  at  the  Minnesota  State  Fair,  1911.  E.xhibited  by  J.  F.  Con- 
verse &  Co.,  Woodville,  New  York. 


BELLE  NETHERLAND  .JOHANNA — HOLSTEIN  COW.  Her 
record  for  the  j'ear  1909  to  1910  was  20,516.9  pounds  milk  and  808.9 
pounds  fat,  or  1,011.1  pounds  butter  80  per  cent.  fat.  Her  record  for 
1910  to  1911  was  22,811.8  pounds  milk  and  883.7  pounds  fat,  or 
1,103.83  pounds  butter.  The  combined  records  of  the  two  years 
(consecutive)  make  her  the  champion  long-distance  cow.  Both  the 
yearly  records  were  made  under  the  rules  of  the  Holstein-Friesian 
Association  for  semi-official  tests.  Her  record  for  seven  days  was 
657.5  pounds  milk  and  24.4  pounds  fat.  Her  record  for  thirty  days 
was  2,797.1  pounds  milk  and  100.5  pounds  fat.  Owned  by  Orchard 
Farm,  Charles  L.  Roberts,  Proprietor,  Basking  Ridge,  N.  J. 


264  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONg. 


JURIDIQUE — PERCHERON  STALLION.  First-prize  winner  at 
Paris  in  a  ring  of  two  hundred  and  sixty  contestants.  Imported  in 
1911  as  a  two-year-old.  First-prize  winner  and  champion  at  the 
Iowa  State  Fair.     Exhibited  by  Robert  Burgess  &  Son,  Wenona,   111. 


AYRSHIRE  CATTLE— CHAMPION  HERD  AT  THE  INTERNA- 
TIONAL DAIRY  SHOW,  HEl.D  AT  MILWAUKEE,  WIS.,  1911. 
Owned  and  exhibited  by  J.  W.  Clise,  Redmond,  state  of  Washington. 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


265 


TvIONTGOMERY  CHIEF.  I,;j(jl — (:^KANU  CHAMPION  SADDLE 
STALLION  AT  THE  LOUISIANA  PURCHASE  EXPOSITION,  1904. 
Sire,  Bourbon  Chief,  9  76;  dam,  Annie.  Bred  by  R.  B.  Young,  of  Mt. 
Sterling,  Kentucky.      Exhibited  by  Ball  Bros.,  of  Versailles,  Kentucky. 


MERRY  MAIDEN'S  THIRD  SON — JERSEY  BULL.  Grand 
champion  of  the  breed  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition,  1904. 
Bred  by  C.  I.  Hood,  of  Lowell,  Mass.,  and  exhibited  by  H.  C.  Taylor^ 
of  Orfordville,  Wisconsin. 


266 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SAMPSON — MORGAN  STALLION.  Winner  of  the  blue  ribbon 
over  all  other  stallions  in  the  Morgan  class  at  the  xMadison  Square 
Garden  in  1910.  Owned  and  exhibited  by  H.  R.  C.  Watson,  Edge 
View  Farm,  Brandon,  Vermont 


PRINCESS  SALATIXK  <'AliLOTTA,  56,190— HOLSTEIN  COW. 
Owned  by  the  University  of  Missouri.  Holds  second  highest  record 
for  the  Holstein  breed  in  Missouri— 18,405  pounds  milk,  721  pounds 
butter  iii  one  yean 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


267 


GENERAL  PEACE — THOROUGHBRED  STALLION.  Suitable 
to  get  weight-carrying  hunters,  Irish  type.  Was  best  stallion,  any 
age.  Royal  Dublin  Show,  in  1904.  Illustration  by  courtesy  of  the 
United  States  Department  of  Agriculture.  From  Annual  Report  of 
the  Bureau  of  Animal  Industry,  1904. 


"THE  WHITE  CHIEF,"  4,045— CHESHIRE  BOAR.  Champion 
Cheshire  boar  at  the  New  York  State  Fair,  1906.  and  grand  champion 
boar  at  the  same  Fair  1908.  Chief  service  boar  in  Cornell  University 
berd  of  Cbesblre  swine, 


268 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SHADYBROOK  GERBEN — HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN  COW.  In  the 
Cow  Demonstration  at  the  World's  Fair,  1904,  she  was  the  Holstein 
champion.  Her  120-day  performance  was  8,101.7  pounds  of  milk 
with  an  average  test  of  ?>..5  per  cent.,  yielding  2  82.6  pounds  of  butter- 
fat,  which  represents  330.36  pounds  of  marketable  butter.  Of  other 
solids  not  fat,  her  record  was  620.53  pounds.  In  butter  production 
her  record  was  the  largest  by  a  fraction  of  a  pound.  SHADYBROOK 
GERBEN  was  exhibited  by  M.  E.  Moore,  of  Cameron,  Mo. 


YESKA  SUNBEAM,  15,439 — GUERNSEY  COW.  During  the 
year  ending  September  30th,  1905.  YESKA  SUNBEAM  gave  14,920.8 
pounds  of  milk  averaging  5.74  per  cent,  fat,  equal  to  857.15  pounds 
of  pure  butter-fat,  which  is  equivalent  to  1,000  pounds  of  merchant- 
able butter,  this  being  at  the  time  the  Avorld's  official  butter-fat 
record  made  under  public  supervision.  YESKA  SUNBEAM  was  bred 
by  W.  D.  Richardson,  of  Garden  City,  Minn.  Owned  when  tested  by 
Fred  Rietrock,  of  Athens,  Wisconsin. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  269 


LULA— REGISTERED  DAIRY  SHORTHORN  COW.  Owned  by 
the  University  of  Missouri.  For  two  years  slie  held  the  highest  milk 
and  butter  record  of  this  breed  in  the  United  States — 12,341  pounds 
milk,   602   pounds  butter. 


CREMO — RED  POLF.ED  BULL.  Grand  champion  at  the 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition,  1908  and  1909.  Exhib- 
ited by  Frank  Davis  &  Sons.  Holbrook,  Neb. 


270  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


ROYAL  MASK— T[iOROT'GHBRED  STALLION.  Suitable  to  get 
weight-carrying  hunters.  Was  the  host  stallion,  any  age.  Royal 
Dublin  Show,  1903.  Illustration  by  courtesy  of  the  United  States 
Department  of  Agriculture.  From  Annual  Report  of  the  Bureau  of 
Animal  Industry,  1904. 


FAY  .JEWELL  BEAUTY — HOLSTEIN  COW.  Grand  champion 
National  Dairy  Show,  Chicago,  1911.  Oflicial  record,  20.02  pounds 
butter  in  seven  days  at  ten  years  old.  Bred  and  owned  at  Wood- 
lake  Farm,  Jno.  B.  Irwin.  Proprietor,  Miuueapolis,  Minu. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


271 


DAYTONA — THOROUGHBRED  MARE.  Grand  champion  at 
the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition.  1004.  Bred  by  J.  B.  Haggin, 
Rancho  del  Paso,  California.  Exhibited  by  Geo.  C.  Graddy,  of  Ver- 
sailles,  Kentucky. 


LONEWOOD  BOY — DEVON  BULL.  Senior  and  grand  cham- 
pion at  the  New  York  State  Fair,  1911.  Exhibited  by  W.  Hi  Neah 
Proprietor  Hillside  Milk  Farm,  Meredith,  N.  H. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


HOWIE'S  LADYLIKE— IMPORTED  AYRSHIRE  COW.  Winner 
of  many  chanipionsliii^s,  including  Hartford,  Conn.,  Detroit,  Mich., 
Springfield,  111.,  Allentown,  Pa.,  and  Syracuse,  N.  Y.  Exhibited  by 
W.  P.  Schanck,  Avon,  \ew  York. 


AYRSHIRE  BULL— I'.L:IC MAX  l^i:fi:iv  l'A.\.  (iraud  ehampiou 
Great  Britain  and  grand  cliampiou  America.  Imported  by  and  at  the 
head  of  WlUowmoor  Parme'  Herd,  Redmond,  state  of  WaBhington. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  273 


PETER  THE  GREAT,  2:07^/4,  BY  PILOT  MEDIUM— ONE  OF 
THE]  GREAT  SIRES  OF  THE  TROTTING  HORSE  FAMILY.  Winner 
of  the  Kentucky  Futurity  in  1S9S  and  sire  of  Grace,  2:05i4,  Sadie 
Mac  2:06%,  and  Peter  Thompson  2:07V2,  winners  of  the  Kentuclty 
Futurity,  1903,  1910  and  1911.-  Owned  at  Patchen  Wilkes  Stock 
Farm,  Lexington,  Ky.  Photo  by  Knight,  of  Lexington,  now  of  Cin- 
cinnati. PETER  THE  GREAT  has  for  years  won  against  all  comers 
at  the  Blue  Grass  Fair  in  the  class  for  the  handsomest  and  best 
harness  Lorce. 


DEHORNED  SHORTHORN  STEERS — A  CAR-LOAD,  1,544 
POUNDS  AVERAGE.  First-prize  winners,  Fort  Worth,  Texas,  Fat 
Stock  Show,  1899.     Fed  by  Marlon  Sansom,  of  Alvarado,  Texas. 


274 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


ALLERTON,  2: 09 14— TROTTING  SIRE.  On  .Tanuary  1st,  of 
the  year  1912,  ALLERTON  stood  at  the  head  of  the  list  of  sires  with 
two  hundred  and  thirty-five  standard  performers  to  his  credit.  As 
grandsire  there  were  seventy-three  more  standard  performers  to  his 
credit. 


MISSOURI  CHIEF— IIOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN  BULL.  Exhibited 
by  M.  E.  Moore,  of  Cameron,  Mo.  Champion  of  the  breed  at  Mia- 
Bourl,  Iowa,  Kaneaa  and  St.  Louis  Fairs,  circuit  of  1902.  Blre  of  Mis- 
souri Chief  Josephine. 


THE    BOO'K    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


275 


1              !        :       i 

1                  !        -I         i 

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1 

M 

^^S^Hbv^i     ^ 

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1 
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i'-^tS^ 

FALSETTO  THE  LAST — RED  POLLED  BULL.  Winner  of 
many  awards,  including  first  prize  in  class  for  aged  bulls,  senior  and 
grand  champion  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition, 
1910.      Exhibited  by  A.  W.  Dopke,  North  Milwaukee,  Wis. 


YOUNG  ALICE'S  PRINCE,  171,11 1— SHORTHORN  BULL. 
Champion  of  Texas,  1903,  1904  and  190.5.  Grand  champion  Southern 
Division  Louisiana  Purchase  PJxposition,  1904;  also  sire  of  grand 
champion  female  in  same  division.  Weight,  2, .5 3  0  pounds  at  five 
years.  Owned  by  David  Harrell,  of  Durham  Park  Stock  Farm, 
Liberty  Hill,  Texas.  'He  meets  you  and  he  leaves  you  as  a  Short- 
horn bull  should  do,  modeled  accurately  in  front  and  well  finished 
behind." 


276 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


PRINCESS  FORTUNE— AS  A  FOUR-YEAR-OLD.  Twice  cham- 
pion Clydesdale  mare  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposi- 
tion in  1909  and  1911.  Exhibited  hy  R.  A.  Fairburn,  New  Market.  X.  .7. 


CORUi:CTui:  !-Alia'AX  -lli:ui:FOin)  bull,  a  senior  year- 
ling. Junior  champion  bull  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock 
Exposition,  1911,     Exhibited  by  J.  P.  Cudahy,  of  Kansas  City.  Mo. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


277 


MINNO— GERMAN  COACH  STALLION.  Champion  at  the 
Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition  of  1911.  Exhibited  by 
J.  Crouch  &  Son,  Lafayette,  Indiana. 


AYRSHIRE  CATTLE— BEST  FOUR  AYRSHIRE  COWS  IN 
MILK  AT  THE  NATIONAL  DAIRY  SHOW,  1911.  Owned  by  P.  Ryan 
Brewster,  New  York. 


278 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


GENESEO  BELL  POLKADOT— HOLSTEIN  COW.  Holder  of 
Iowa  state  record  for  day  and  week's  production  of  butter-fat.  Owned 
by  the  Iowa  State  College,  Ames,  Iowa.  Milk  record,  one  day,  108.8 
pounds;  butter-fat,  4.06  pounds.  Milk  record,  seven  days,  732.3 
pounds;    27.25  pounds  butter-fat. 


KLOMAN— ABERDEEN-ANGUS  BULL.  Grand  champion  at 
many  shows,  including  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposi- 
tion. 1911.     Exhibited  by  A.  C.  Binnie.  Alta,  Iowa. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


279 


MISSOURI  CHIEF  JOSEPHINE— HOLSTEIN  COW.  Owned  by 
the  University  of  Missouri.  Held  second  highest  official  milk  record. 
Highest    for    Missouri — 26,801    pounds    milk,    861    pounds    butter    in 

one  ypar. 


MYRTLE  OF  MAPLES— GALLOWAY  HEIFER.  A  junior  calf. 
Good  enough  to  be  first  in  class  and  junior  champion,  Chicago  Inter- 
national Live  Stock  Exposition,  1911.  Exhibited  by  C.  S.  Hechtner, 
of  Chariton,  Iowa. 


280 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


METEOR  MORGAN — MORGAN  STALLION.  First-iirize  winner 
at  St.  Louis,  Kansas  City  and  Philadelphia  Horse  Shows.  One  of  the 
best  and  handsomest  of  the  Morgan  horses.  Owned  and  exhibited  by 
H.  P.  Crane,  Wild  Rose  Farm,  St.  Charles,  HI. 


LADYLIKE — C.ALLOW.W     lu^^.      I  \\u     YEA  I..  i  XUER 

THREE.      Senior  champion  female  at  che  Chicago  Lnt-  .-diock  Exposi- 
tion, 1911.     Exhibited  by  Straub  Bros.,  Avoca,  Iowa. 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


281 


DEFENDER,  140,037— HEREFORD  BULL.  Owned  by  C.  G. 
Comstock  &  Son,  of  Albany,  Mo.  Reserve  grand  champion  World's 
Fair,  St.   Louis,    ]904.      Grand   champion  bull  of  the  American  Royal 


mn 


-# 


SUDBOURNE  RUBY— SUFFOLK  PUNCH  MARE,  FOUR  YEARS 
OLD.  Champion  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition, 
1911.     Exhibited  by  Fred  W.  Okie,  Marshall.  Va. 


282 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


ASIIAIOOR  LUTHER — THREE-YEAR-OLD  SULFOLK  I'l  NCil 
STALLION.  Reserve  champion,  Chkago  [nternational  Live  Stock 
Exposition,  1911.      Exhibited  by  Fred  W.  Okie,  Marshall,  Va. 


^^^p^ssH^^^^ 


JOHANNA  BONHEUR — HOLSTEIN  COW.  A.  R.  O.  records: 
90  pounds  milk  in  one  day;  23.1  pounds  butter  in  seven  days;  20,522.4 
pounds  milk,  714.5  pounds  butter-fat  in  one  year.  Bred  and  owned 
by  W.  J.  Gillett,  Spring  vale  Stock  Farm,  Rosendale,  Wis. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


283 


CRADK    aiiuupyiiun^j — the    grand    champion  wether 

SHROPSHIRE,  LEICESTER  BREEDING,  INTERNATIONAL  LIVE 
STOCK  EXPOSITION  OF  1911.  Exhibited  by  J.  Lloyd  Jones,  Bur- 
ford,  Ontario,  Canada. 


PEDRO'S  ESTELLA,  197,245— JERSEY  COW.  Bred  and  owned 
by  the  University  of  Missouri.  For  two  years  she  held  the  highest 
record  for  the  Jersey  breed  as  a  three-year-old.  Record,  11,063 
pounds  nailk,  712  pounds  butter  iu  one  year. 


284 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


SCOTTISH  LASSIE — HEREFORD  FEMALE.  Photo  as  a  two- 
year-old.  Twice  grand  champion  of  the  breed  at  the  Chicago  Interna- 
national  Live  Stock  Exposition.  Exhibited  by  J.  P.  Cudahv,  Kansas 
City,  Mo. 


BUNCH  OF  CHESTER  WHITE  PIGS  ALL  UNDER  SIX  MONTHS 
OLD.  They  took  four  first  prizes  and  award  for  champion  boar  pig 
and  grand  champion  sow  pig  at  the  Missouri  State  Fair,  1911. 
Exhibited  by  Nunnelly  Bros.,  Readsville,  Missouri. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


285 


TRUMANS'  SENSATION- -BAY  SHIRE  GELDING.  Weighed 
2,240  pounds.  Best  single  draft  horse  in  harness,  Chicago  Interna- 
tional Live  Stock  Exposition,  1911.  Exhibited  by  Trumans'  Pioneer 
Stud  Farm,   Bushnell,  Illinois. 


DAIRY  CATTLE  EXHIBITED  BY  THE  UNIVERSITY  OF  MIS- 
SOURI AT  THE  MISSOURI  STATE  FAIR.  Partial  view  of  picture, 
containing  six  .lerseys.  Average  year's  record,  12,440  pounds  milk, 
702  pounds  butter.  One  Dairy  Shorthorn  record,  12,341  pounds 
milk,  602  pounds  butter;  two  Holsteins,  average  record,  22,632 
pounds  milk,  793  pounds  butter. 


286 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


MON  (iuos     (•iii':siM  r  i;i:i,t,i.\  •.   - 1  ■  I.!    ■  I        ,-  iii.i-:K- 

YEAR-OLD.  P'irst-prize  winner  and  champion  at  the  Chicago  Inter- 
national Live  Stock  Exposition  of  1911.  Exhibited  by  J.  Crouch  & 
Son,  Lafayette,  Indiana. 


ENFIELD  NIPPER — PONY  STALLION.  Belonging  to  the  class 
between  13  and  14.1  hands.  A  winner  at  many  Eastern  shows. 
When  shown,  considered  to  be  one  of  the  greatest  ponies  in  existence. 
Exhibited  by  W.  D.  Henry,  of  Irviugton  Stock  Farm,  Pennsylvania. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  287 


BRITISH  LIOX — GREAT  HIGH  STEPPER.  Old-time  winner. 
Black  gelding,  15.?.  hands  high,  seven  years  old.  Winner  of  cham- 
pionships at  Nashville,  Atlanta,  Kansas  City  and  St.  Louis  Horse 
Shows.      Exhibited  by  Crow  &  Murray,  of  Toronto,  Canada. 


ZAIRE  THE  GREAT — THREE-YEAR-OLD  POLLED  ANGUS 
BULL.  Champion  and  first-prize  winner  at  many  shows;  grand 
champion  at  the  Illinois  State  Fair,  1906.  Bred  by  S.  E.  Lantz  and 
exhibited  by  M.  P.  &  S.  E.  Lantz.  of  Carlock.  111. 


288 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


REDLAC,  2:071/2 — CONSIDERED  THE  GREATEST  SON  OF 
ALLERTON,  2:09%.  REDLAC  is  a  puve-gaited  trotting  horse  and 
is  already  sire  of  thirteen  with  records  in  standard  time.  Owned  by 
Ho])per  Stock   Farm,   Indianola,  Iowa. 


ANNIE  DARLING,   2d— BROWN  SWISS  COW.      Graad  champion 
at  the  Illinois  State  Fair,  1905.     Exhibited  by  Hull  Bros.,  Perry.  Ohio. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  2S0 


BERKLEY  BAxNTAM — CHAMPION  PONY  STALLION.  Exhib- 
ited by  W.  H.  Moore,  of  New  York  City  This  imported  pony,  show- 
ing in  class  not  exceeding  12.1  hands, -won  at  Philadeli)hia.  1905, 
over  tlie  crack  ponies  of  the  day.  Noted  for  extreme  brilliancy, 
accuracy  in  action,  an  all-round  jioiiy  wonder.  His  cost  was  about 
$8,000.00. 


FOUR  SHORTHORNS — WINNING  PRIZE  FOR  GET  OF  ONE 
SIRE.  Picture  includes  DALE'S  GIFT  on  right,  reserve  senior  cham- 
pion female,  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition  of  1911. 
Exhibited  by  Carpenter  &  Ross,  Mansfield,  Ohio. 


290 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


KIXG— UI']1>  I'OLLEl)  STli:i<]ll.  An  outstandins;  winner  and 
remarkable  calf,  under  one  year.  Exhibited  by  A.P.  Arj),  Hlldrid.iie,  Iowa. 
rh:mii)inn  at   the  ('birago  International   l.,ive  Stock  P]xi)()sition  of  1  it  1  1 . 


STAR  OF  THE  NORTH— SHORTHORN  BULL.  First-prize 
aged  Shorthorn  bull  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposi- 
tion, 1901.     Exhibited  by  I.  M.  Forbes  &  Son,  of  Henry,  111. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


291 


PERFECTION  LASS— HEREFORD  FEMALE.  First-prize  junior 
yearling  and  junior  champion  heifer,  Chicago  International  Live  Stock 
Exposition   of   1911.     Exhibited   by   Luce   &   Moxley,   Shelby ville,   Ky. 


i'RlXC'KSS  A1AI:S11A1.L  SIK JliTl  it )UX  COW.  (iraud  champion 
at  State  Fairs  and  grand  champion  at  the  Chicago  Live  Stock  Exposi- 
tion of  1911.     Exhibited  by  Roseuberger  &  Edwards,  Tiffin,  Ohio. 


292 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


CASINO  (45,462).  27,830— FAMOUS  PERCHERON  STALLION. 
Owned  and  exhibited  by  J.  W.  &  J.  C.  Robison,  of  Towanda,  Kas. 
First  prize  in  the  aged  class  at  the  Missouri  State  Fair  two  years  in 
succession,  besides  winning  many  other  blue  libbons;  also  a  prize 
winner  at  the  National  Show  in  France  in  1901.  CASINO  also  won 
first  prize  in  class  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition,  1904,  then 
owned  by  McLaughlin  Bros.     One  of  the  great  sires  of  the  breed. 


COM  r.i.NATii  i\     CI  I  i:si'i':i;    wiirri';    \\n\::      c  .,,,1    by    v.    d. 

Humbert,  of  Nashua,  Iowa.  WeiKiiinK,  TOO  ijouuds  ad  a  yearling. 
First-prize  and  sweepstakes  winner  at  Missouri,  Iowa,  Kansas  aiid 
Nebraska  State  Fairs,  and  at  St.  Louis  in  1902. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  293 


PETROLEUM  —  CHAMPION  EASTERN  SADDLE  HORSE. 
Photograph  taken  by  Schreiber  <fe  Sons,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
PETR0LEU:M  was  winner  of  blue  ribbons  at  most  of  the  Horse  Shows 
in  the  Eastern  States. 


FAT  BARROWS — GRAND  CHAMPION  PEN  AT  THE  CHICAGO 
INTERNATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION  OF  1911.  Exhibited 
by  Iowa  Agricultural  College,  1911. 


294 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


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IMP.  ROUGE,  II.,  OF  THE  BRICKFIELD — GUERNSEY  COW. 
Holder  of  world's  record  for  two-and-one-half-year-old  Channel 
Island  bred  heifer — 10,963  pounds  milk  and  612. .53  pounds  butter- 
fat.      Owned  by  the  Iowa  State  College,  Ames,  Iowa. 


SILTA.X  ol'  (lAKI.AM'S  oXI-:  OK  'I' I  IP:  KA.MOl'S  JERSEY 
Bll.l.ri  l.M  PUR  TKiJ  1- ROM  TiiK  KSl.AXlJ  OF  .JERSEY.  Has  won 
many  prizes  and  is  considered  by  reason  of  conformation,  breeding 
and  inheritance  to  be  one  of  the  leaders  of  the  breed.  SULTAN  OF 
OAKLANDS  is  owned  hy  Percival  Roberts,  Jr.,  Proprietor  of  Pens- 
hurst  Farm.  Narberth,  Fa.  i<Moni  photograph  by  Schreiber  &  Sons, 
Art  Photographers,  Arch  street,  Philadelphia,  Pa, 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


295 


THE  PRESIDENT  —  CARRIAGE  HORSE  AND  TANDEM 
LEADER.  Purchased  with  his  mate,  THE  BARON,  by  Mrs.  .1.  M.  B. 
Grosvenor  for  $25,000.00  of  the  importer,  Mr.  E.  B.  Jordan. 


ST.  LAMBERT'S  RIOTliE.-S.  1  uii.J  Ju  .J  EUSL  Y  CU\V.  Record: 
7,238  pounds  12.8  ounces  of  milk,  410  pounds  G.6  ounces  fat,  equiva- 
lent to  4  83  pounds  butter,  in  authenticated  test  for  one  year,  super- 
vised by  Cornell  University  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  This 
cow  was  seventeen  years  old  at  the  end  of  the  test  period.  Owned  by 
Ayer  &  McKinney,  Meridale  Farms,  Meredith,  N.  Y. 


296  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


THE  BAROX— CARRl\r;K  llOKSH  AXL  TAXDEM  HORSE. 
With  THE  PRESIDENT,  his  mate,  constituted  a  winning  team  at 
Eastern  Shows  when  owned  and  exhibited  by  Mrs.  J.  M.  B.  Grosvenor. 


MARKER — RED  POLLED  BULL.      Senior  and  grand  champion  at 
the  Illinois  State  Fair,  1911.     Exhibited  by  J.  Kestel,  New  Lenox,  111. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


297 


FRISK    PlilXCE — CLYDESDALE    STALLION.      A    three-year-old 
champion   at   the  Chicago   International   Live   Stock  Exposition,    1911. 

Exhibited  by  Conyinghaiu   Bros.,  Wilkesbarre,  Pa. 


BUFFALO  SKYLARK  AMES,  56,894 — HOLSTEIN  BULL.  Junior 
champion  at  the  National  Dairy  Show,  1909.  Bred  and  shown  by 
the  Chicago  Stock  Farm,  R.  B.  Young,  Owner,  Buffalo  Center,  Iowa. 
Present  owner,  Henry  Schroedermeyer,  Waverly,  Iowa. 


298  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


Ll^Ai..'..,  1  ^j.,  1  llui:uL'(.UJlJUElJ  i.'.)i.-[..  1  ui;i  .i.;.r  record, 
7:19%.  The  greatest  race  horse  and  sire  of  his  day.  Photograph 
dated  1872.  From  a  copyright  picture  by  permission  of  Schreiber  & 
Sons,  Art  Photographers,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


LOCKHART  DE  KOL— HOLSTEIN  COW.  At  two  years  eleven 
months  and  twenty-one  days,  tested  for  seven  days:  Milk,  566.9 
pounds;  butter,  29.27  pounds.  Thirty-days'  test:  Milk,  2,415.9  pounds; 
butter,  116.5  pounds;  both  world's  records.  As  senior  three-year-old 
her  milk  was  536.2  pounds  in  seven  days;  butter,  30.5  pounds.  All 
records  made  and  two  calves  raised  in  less  than  a  year.  Owned  by 
Eugene  La  Munion,  Solsville,  N.  Y. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


299 


TANGARTNE — PONY  \l\:;i.  ■-: -i-cn  Hands.  When  ex- 
hibited at  Eastern  Horse  Shows,  stood  to  win  in  any  company.  Was 
one  of    the  historical  string  of  prize  winners  exhibited  by  Eben  D.Jordan. 


FLYING  FOX— FAMOUS  IMPORTED  JERSEY  BULL.  Great 
prize  winner  on  Island.  Bought  for  $7,500  by  Mr.  Thomas  W. 
Lawson,  of  Boston.  Mass. 


300  THE    BOOK    O.F    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


ADMIRAL  DEWEY,  2:06%;  BEHIND  WIND  SHIELD,  2:04%  — 
BAY  TROTTING  STALLION,  BY  BINGEN,  2:06%.  Dam,  Nancy 
Hanks,  2:04,  by  Happy  Medium,  son  of  Hambletonian.  Although 
ADMIRAL  DEWEY  died  young,  he  made  a  reputation  as  sire  of  trotters. 


SCOTTISH  CHIEF,  III.— GALLOWAY  BULL,  FOUR  YEARS 
OLD.  Grand  champion  at  the  Minnesota,  Iowa,  Indiana  and  Illinois 
State  Fairs,  190.^.  Exhibited  i)y  Brookside  Farm  Company,  Fort 
Wayne,  Indiana. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


noi 


ONtMAMMOTIt 


LIMESTONE  MAMMOTH — FAMOUS  JACK.  Bred  and  owned  by 
L.  M.  Monsees  &  Sons,  Smithton,  Mo.  He  was  exhibited  ten  years  and 
never  defeated.  He  was  equaliy  successful  as  a  sire.  He  was  15% 
hands  high,  weighing  1,1.^>0  pounds.  Sire  of  the  St.  Louis  World's  Fair 
grand  champion  jennet:  sired  the  senior  and  junior  champion  jennets; 
sired  one  of  the  junior  champion  jacks,  and  many  of  the  first-prize 
winners. 


THE  .JERSEYS  AT  BILTMORE — This  is  a  picture  of  the  Van- 
derbilt  Jerseys  on  the  Biltmore  estate,  out  in  a  pasture  near  Asheville, 
North  Carolina.  Several  champions  are  to  be  seen  in  this  herd  of 
dairy  cattle. 


302 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


GAIXSFORD  MAIIQUIS — IMPORTED  SHORTHORN  BILL.  A 
senior  yearling.  First  in  class,  junior  champion  and  reserve  srand 
champion,  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition.  Exhibited 
by  J.  A.   Watt,  Salem,  Ontario.  Canada. 


UPLAND  JETHRO,  1,6G3 — BROWN  SWISS  BULL.  State  Fair 
prize  winner,  New  York  and  Ohio,  as  calf  and  yearling,  and  reserve 
champion  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition  as  a  two-year-old. 
Bred  and  exhibited  by  F.  R.  Hazard,  of  Syracuse,  N,  Y. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


303 


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SWEET  MARIE,  2:02— FAMOUS  TROTTING  MARE.  P>om 
copyright  photograph  by  permission  of  Schreiber  &  Sons,  of  Phila- 
delphia, Pa.  SWEET  MARIE  is  by  McKinney,  2: 11 14,  he  by 
Alcyone,  2:27. 


NETHERHALL  BROWNIE,  9th — THE  "WORLD'S  CHAMPION 
AYRSHIRE  COW.  Official  record  for  365  consecutive  days:  18,110 
pounds  of  milk  and  820.91  pounds  of  butter-fat,  equal  to  958  pounds 
of  butter.  Owned  by  J.  W.  Clise,  Proprietor  Willowmoor  Farnis,  Red- 
mond, state  of  Washington. 


304 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


if> 


i 


DAlFtYMAIl)  OF  PIXEHURST-  GU ERXSEY  COW.  Made  several 
remarkable  tests.  The  last  as  a  -1  Va -year-old,  with  the  following 
results:  Year's  milk,  17,2Sr,.-j()  pounds:  average  butter-fat,  5.i'7  per 
cent.:  total  butter-fat,  910.67  i)ounds.  UAIRYMAID  OF  PINEHURST 
was  bred  by  Mrs.  E.  W.  Strowbridge,  of  Mcorestown,  X.  J.,  and  owned 
by  W.  W.  Marsh,  of  Waterloo,  Iowa. 


ABB1':SS  .M(lli:.\KV.  ,-,ih  T\VO-YEAl:-()Lf)  ACIOKDEEX-AXGIS 
HEIFER.  Grand  champion  Illinois  State  Fair,  I'JOj.  Exhibited  by 
W.  A.  McHeury,  of  Denison,  Iowa. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


305 


SFOTSWUUi)  D.USV  PWAKL,  l7,t,;Hi — til  KKXhEV  t'UW.  The 
record  of  this  wonderful  cow  as  a  seven-year-old  is  18,602.80  pounds 
of  milk  in  one  year:  butter-fat  content,  5.15  per  cent.;  butter-fat  pro- 
duction, 957.38  i)0unds.  SPOTSWOOI)  DAISY  PEARL  was  bred  by 
Edward  F.  Price,  of  Broad  Axe,  Pa.,  and  is  now  owned  by  O.  C.  Barber, 
of  Anna  Dean  Farms,  Barberton,  Ohio. 


POLLY  PRIM  AND  SWEET  MARIE— TROTTING-BRED  CAR- 
RIAGE HORSES.  Exhibited  by  Alfred  G.  Vanderbilt  and  winning  at 
PMladelphia  and  other  shows. 


106  THE    BOOK    OP^    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


MILDRED — HACKNEY  .MARE.  A  thampion  harness  mare,  and 
whose  blue  ribbons  are  counted  by  the  hundreds.  Picture  taken  in  the 
year  1904  by  Schreiber,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


HOSNTAN'S  ANNA,  i':;i,:..M  .)KUSI':\  COW.  Record:  !t,T;t2 
pounds  8  ounces  milk,  fiSl  pounds  12.2  ounces  fat,  equivalent  to  084 
pounds  7  ounces  butter,  in  authenticated  test,  supervised  by  Storrs 
Agricultural  College  and  Illinois  Agricultural  Experiment  Station. 
During  the  year  of  this  test  she  traveled  between  3.000  and  4,000 
miles  on  Fair  Circuit.  She  has  won  twenty  awards  in  the  show  ring  in 
Europe  and  America.  Owned  by  C.  I.  Hudson,  Knollwood  Farm,  East 
Norwich.  New  York. 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


307 


RALEIGH'S  FAIRY  BOY— JERSEY  BULL.  Has  won  a  large 
number  of  championshii)  prizes  in  the  show  rings  at  the  State  Fairs  of 
Iowa.  New  York,  Illinois,  New  England,  and  including  grand  champion- 
shii) at  the  National  Dairy  Show,  1910.  is  in  Register  of  Merit  as  sire 
of  producing  cows  and  prize  winners.  Owned  by  C.  I.  Hudson,  Knoll- 
wood  Farm,  East  Norwich,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 


This  BOOK  OF  LIVE  STOCK  CHAMPIONS  is  published  in  con- 
nection with  the  monthly  National  Farmer  and  Stock  Grower  of  St.  Louis. 


AGGIE  LAD  COLANTHA — HOLSTEIN  BULL.  Bred  by  W.  B. 
Barney,  Hampton,  Iowa.  First  prize  at  the  Wisconsin  State  Fair  as  a 
yearling  and  as  grown  bull  sweepstakes  winner  at  the  Territorial  Fairs 
of  Arizona.     Exhibited  by  H.  Renaud,  Phoenix,  Arizona. 


^.-08  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


GREAT  SCOT'S  CHAMPION — JERSEY  COW.  Grand  champion 
female  at  the  National  Dairy  Show,  1911.  Exhibited  by  Ed.  C. 
Lasater,  Falfurrias,  Texas. 


GOLDEN  HERO,  1  f) 0,3 6 3— POLLED  DURHAM  BItLL.  Grand 
chaminon  at  the  I>ouisiana  Purchase  Exi)osition.  1!U)4.  "This  bull  is 
making  enduring  history  both  as  a  sire  and  prize  winner."  Was  also 
champion  of  the  Polled  Durhams  at  the  Chicago  International  Live 
Stock  Exposition.  1904.  Property  of  A.  C.  Wood  &  Sons,  Pendleton,  lud. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


309 


McALISTER'S  BETTY — AYRSHIRE  COW.  Leading  three-year- 
old,  with  record  of  14,208  pounds  of  milk,  4.19  per  cent,  fat,  581.41 
pounds  of  butter-fat,  equivalent  to  678  pounds  of  commercial  butter  in 
one  year.      Owned  by  Percival  Roberts,  Jr.,  Narberth,  Pa. 


BELLE  KITSER,  2:08 — A  TROTTING  STAR.  In  classes  which 
Included  the  fastest  horses  she  won  three  events  in  the  year  1903. 
The  Horse  Review  said:  "She  has  done  a  great  deal  to  add  interest  to 
trotting  history." 


310 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


Bi.ArKRt)*  K— (;KAM<  CilAMi'loX  STKKR,  CHICAGO  IN'IKK- 
NATIONAL  LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION  OF  190.^.  As  a  two-year-old 
steer  weighed  l,Gf>0  pounds  and  dressed  69.97  ])er  cent,  of  meat  to  car- 
cass. BLACKROCK  was  a  grade  Aberdeen-Angus  steer,  picked  out  of 
a  car-load  of  yearlings  on  the  Chicago  market  by  Prof.  C.  F.  Curtiss 
and  fed  and  exhibited  by  the  Agricultural  College,  Ames,  Iowa. 


LINCOLN  SHEEP — CHAMPION  YEARLING  AT  ARGENTINE 
RURAL  SOCIETY,  SOUTH  AMERICA.  Sold  at  auction  for  $1,350. 
From  "Animal  Industry  in  Argentina"  by  F.  W.  Bicknell,  United  States 
Pepartment  o£  Agriculture. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


311 


OLGA  4TH'S  PRIDE,  160,791 — JERSEY  COW.  Record  in 
authenticated  test  for  one  year,  supervised  by  Cornell  University  Ex- 
periment Station:  16,275  pounds  13.2  ounces  millt,  851  pounds  11.75 
ounces  fat,  1,005  pounds  14  ounces  butter,  83  per  cent,  fat — the  third 
highest  record.  She  was  scored  93.15  per  cent,  of  the  perfect  scale  by 
Prof.  H.  H.  Wing.  Bred  and  owned  by  George  H.  Sweet,  Beechlands, 
East  Aurora,  New  York. 


KING  OF  THE  PONTIACS — FAMOUS  HOLSTEIN  BULL.  Sire 
of  fifty-three  A.  R.  O.  daughters.  Owned  by  Stevens  Bros.  Co.,  Liver- 
pool, New  York. 


312  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    f'HAMPTOXS. 


DOMINOE — PO.W  (,i:i>i>L\(i.  Mother  to  Tangerine,  both  sired 
by  Dilham  Prime  Minister  out  of  Little  Wonder.  Winner  of  many 
first  prizes  at  Eastern  Horse  Shows. 


wiXMi':     oi'  M  i:.\iu)\\  i:i;(i():x  ^^\l;Ll^l-        ijudeex- 

ANGUS    HElFlilii.  First-i)rize    winner    and    junior    cliumiiion    at    the 

Hlinois   State   Fair,  1908.     Exhibited   by   Bradfute  &   Son,   of  Cedar- 
Yille,  Ohio. 


THE    BOOK    OF' LIVE    STOCK    CITAMPIONS. 


313 


BARBARA  McHEXRY.  2  4th — ABERDEEx\-ANGUS  COW.  Senior 
and  grand  champion  at  the  International  Live  Stock  Exposition  of 
1910.      Exhihited  by  W.  A.  INIcHenry,  Denison.  Iowa. 


FAT  BEEF  CATTLE— GRAND  CHAMPION  STEERS  AT  THE 
FEEDERS'  AND  BREEDERS'  SHOW,  FORT  WORTH.  TEXAS,  1912. 
Exhibited  by  .J.  W.  Cook  &  Son,  Beeville,  Texas.  Sold  by  Clay,  Robin- 
son &  Co.  to  Armour  &  Co.  at  $10.75  per  100  pounds.  These  yearling 
steers  averaged  1,024  pounds  in  market  and  dressed  62. HO  per  cent, 
meat  to  carcass. 


314 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


LADY  ECCLES — J^ANCY  HARNESS  POXY.  One  of  the  Eastern 
champions,  a  few  years  ago.  when  Eben  D.  .Jordan,  of  Boston,  Mass., 
owner  of  LADY  ECCLES,  was  one  of  the  leading  exhibitors. 


ENGLEWUODS  Fl  liE?*I  AX  TAM  WORTH  BOAR.  Grand  cham- 
IJiou  at  the  Louisiana  Purchase  Exposition,  1904.  The  Tamworth  hog 
is  not  noted  for  its  beauty,  but  for  massive  frame  and  deep  sides,  a 
typical  bacon  hog.      Exhibited  by  W.  W.  Morton,  of  Russellville,  Ky. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  315 


BLACKCAP  McHENRY,  84th — ABERDEEN-ANGUS  HEIFER. 
Junior  champion  at  the  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition  of 
1911.      Exhibited  by  W.  A.  McHenry,  Denison,  Iowa. 


METZCEUS  DUnE"POL.'\Nn-CIllNA  ROAR,  AS  A  YEARLlXri. 
Owned  by  Mr.  E.  M.  Metzger,  of  Fairfield,  Iowa.  Picture  taken  at  the 
St.  Louis  Fair,  1903,  he  having  won  highest  prize  for  Poland-Chmas. 


ir. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAISIPIONS. 


FIRE  ENGINE  HORSE— RUNNING  TO  HOSE  WAGON  IN 
ENGINE  COMPANY  NO.  6,  INDIANAPOLIS,  IND.,  J.  HARRY  JOHN- 
SON, CAPTAIN.  Since  April,  1898,  with  the  exception  of  three  weeks 
on  pasture,  has  been  in  continuous  service,  making  from  197  to  280 
runs  per  year.  In  the  year  1911  he  was  out  2:](;  alarms,  some  of  the 
runs  being  four  miles  long.  He  is  brown  in  color,  stocky  built,  fifteen 
hands  high,  and  weighs  l.i'.OO  pounds.  A  great  example  of  a  cham- 
pion fire  engine  horse. 


ita..^»>»»,  *;<-.< 


^iS^-^Jt-WU^-T^-  - 


PROTECTION  CHIEF,  4,9(;i,  AM.  C.  W.  RECORO— CHESTER 
WHITE  HOAR.  Owned  by  W.  T.  Dever,  of  Lucasville,  Ohio.  Winner 
of  first  prize  and  sweepstakes  at  the  Ohio  State  Fair  four  years  in 
guCQession. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


317 


318 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


THE  CLYDESDALE  IN  HARNESS. — This  picture  is  from  a  pho- 
tograph of  one  of  the  imported  pure-bred  Clydesdale  geldings  exhib- 
ited at  the  First  Chicago  International  Live  Stock  Exposition  for  the 
purpose  of  showing  the  draft  horse  to  perfection.  Liverpool  is  noted 
for  power  in  draft  stock,  and  this  was  a  Liverpool  champion. 


FANCY,  r,S,;tsri-  DERKSIIIRI':  S0\V.  Bred  and  owned  by 
Thomas  Teal  &  Son,  of  lUica,  Iowa.  As  yearling  was  first  and  sweep- 
stakes, St.  Louis  Fair,  1901.      Weighed  456  pounds  when  396  days  old. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


319 


(V   -      ^. 


i20  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMnOXa 


STARLIGHT       l-AMUl'S      i'U  IZK-WINNING      liA'JKM;\ 
LIOX.      The  property  ot  Mr.  F.  G.  Bourne,  of  New  Yoik  City. 


OAKVILLE  QUIET  LAD— SENIOR  AND  GRAND  CHAMPION 
ABERDEEN-ANGUS  BULL  AT  THE  CHICAGO  INTERNATIONAL 
LIVE  STOCK  EXUOSITION  OK  1!M<i.  Exhibited  by  O.  V.  Battles, 
Maquoketa,  Iowa. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


321 


AXWORTHY,  2:loy2 — BY  AXTELL,  2:12.  Sire  of  Hamburg- 
Belle,  2:01%;  also  of  seventy  or  more  standard  performers,  all  trot- 
ters and  a  few  pacers.      Owned  at  Empire  City  Farms,  Cuba,  N.  Y. 


MINOR  HEIR,  l::,9Yi — CHAMPION  PACER  OF  1 ;»()!).  Brown 
stallion,  foaled  1902;  sire,  Heir  at  Law,  2:0r)i^;  dam,  Kitty  Clover. 
Driven  to  his  record  at  Phoenix,  Ariz.,  November  13th,  1909,  by  Harry 
C.  Hersey.  Owned  by  M.  W.  Savage,  International  Stock  Farm,  Min- 
neapolis, Minnesota. 


!22 


THE    ROOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


by    Col.    John    T.    Hughes,    Elkton    Stock    Farm,    near    Lexingcoii,    Ky 
Was  champion  of  Blue  Grass  Shows  three  successive  years. 


LAKESIDE  MODEL  KING,  AT  TWO  YEARS— HOLSTEIX  lU'LL. 
Winner  of  first  i)rize  as  two-yoar-old.  Championship  over  all  bulls 
two  vears  or  over.  tSrand  chaini)ionshii)  over  all  bulls  of  all  ages  at 
New  York  State  Fair,  lyiu.     Owned  by  E.  A.  Powell,  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


323 


J^ 

irW 

"         1 

MISS     STOKES,     2:08%— BY     PETER     THE     GREAT,    2:01Vi. 
MISS  STOKES  was  the  champion  yearling  trotter,  1910. 


BAXUSTINE  BEI.LE  Dt^J  Kul. — HULSTEIX  COW.  Latest  queen 
of  the  dairy  world.  Yearly  record,  27,404.4  pounds  of  milk,  3.86  per 
cent,  fat,  1.0r>8.34  pounds  of  butter-fat,  equivalent  to  1,323  pounds  of 
commercial  butter.  Holder  of  other  world's  records.  Owned  by 
Maplecrest  Farm,  Dau  Dimmick  &  Brq.,  Proprietors,  East  Claridon,  O, 


324  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


ALLKX  \\i.\"l"KI{,  l':im;' 
ICAN  TROTTIXC.  DEllUY,  $ 
for  harness  horse. 


..-     WINNER    OF    TIIIO     FlliST    A.MER- 
,0,0 00.      The   largest  stake  ever  offered 


DAN  PATCH,  1: 5;-)— FIGHT  HARNESS  CHAMPION  OF  THE 
WORLD.  Has  broken  world's  records  fourteen  times.  Has  paced  120 
miles,  averaging;  2:02V2.  Picture  by  McClure,  of  Lexington.  Ky.  DAN 
PATCH  is  owned  by  M.  W.  Savage,  International  Horse  Farm,  Minne- 
apolis. Minu.     See  also  page  21i>, 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  325 


REX  Mcdonald — retired  grand  champion  of  the 

SADDLE   RINGS   OF  THE   CONTINENT.      Ridden  by  present  owner, 
B.  R.  Middleton,  Mexico,  Mo.      See  also  page  68. 


DAISY  GRACE  DE  KOL — HOLSTEIN  COW.  World's  champion 
junior  four-year-old.  Record  for  one  year,  21,718.3  pounds  of  milk, 
4.43  per  cent,  fat,  962.8  pounds  butter-fat,  equivalent  to  1,203.5 
pounds  of  commercial  butter.  Owned  by  Maplecrest  Farm,  Dan  Dim- 
mick  &  Bro.,  Proprietors.  East  Claridon,  Ohio. 


326 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


STAR   SHOOT — THOROUGHBRED   STALLION.      Premier  sire   of 
America  in  ISlll.      Owned  by  Clay  &  Woodford,  Paris,  Kentucky. 


I              ' 

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m^^^gPIPPHPiED  er  kX  JOHn5TOn,LAWRCnCEMH5, 

iv.  .1,  .UOM WELL— ANGORA  GOAT.  A  great  prize  winner  and 
sire  ot  prize  winners,  shearing  9  V^  to  11  pounds  of  lustrous  mobair 
fle^c^,     Owp^a  by  R,  Q,  JolingtQn,  qf  L9.wr^uce,  Kaosa^. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


327 


POKTRY  Ol-'  MOTIO-V-  FAAIOUS  WALK,  TROT  AND  CANTER 
SADDLE  GELDLXa.  Winner  ol'  more  chaniijionships  in  England  and 
America  than  any  other  saddle  horse  in  the  history  of  the  show  ring. 
Purchased  recently  by  Miss  Oreci  Seibert,  of  Indianapolis,  Ind. 
During  the  past  few  years  POETRY  OF  MOTION  was  shown  for  exhi- 
bition only,  being  barred  from  competition  at  most  shows. 


COUNCILLOR — CHESTER    WHITE    BOAR.      Champion    at    the 
Illinois  State  Fair,  1905.     Exhibited  by  E.  J.  Brouhard,  of  Colo,  Iowa. 


328 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


KENTUCKY'S  CHOICE— SADDLE  ^1  Al.l.uN  clainnd  to  be 
the  finest  saddle  horse  living.  Winner  ot  many  championships. 
Ridden  by  Mat  S.  Cohen  at  Bellvue  Stock  Farm,  Danville,  Ky.  Prop- 
erty of  Mrs.  Richard  Tasker  Lowndes,  Jr. 


BEKKSlllIiE  SWINK— CH.\:\1P]()N  HERD  AT  THE  GREAT  ST, 
LOUIS  FAIR,  1900.  Combined  weight,  2,700  pounds.  Exhibited  by 
Jno.  F.  Stover,  of  Crawfordsville,  Ind. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


329 


UNDl'LATA  CHIJ'J^'—SADDLKI  STALJ.IUN.  Foaled  HMtS.  Son 
of  St.  Louis  World's  Fair  champion,  Montgomery  Chief.  His  many- 
winnings  include  junior  championship  at  the  Blue  Grass  Fair,  1911. 
Bred  and  owned  by  Undulata  Farm,  Shelbyville,  Ky. 


CARDON — IMPORTED  PERCHERON  STALLION.  Owned  and 
exhibited  by  Walker  Bros.,  Oklahoma  City,  Okla.  Winner  of  various 
prizes  at  Arkansas  and  Oklahoma  State  Fairs  and  champion  at  the 
Arkansas  State  Fair  of  1911. 


330  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


CARON  DE  BAU — BELGIAN  STALLION.  Winner  of  many  prizes. 
Now  seven  years  old.  Weighs  2,300  pounds.  Owned  by  \V.  C.  Goodloe, 
of  Fairlawn,  near  Lexington,  Kentucky. 


ASTRAL  KING— SADDLE  STALLION,  BY  BOURBON  KING.  In 
his  three-year-old  form  in  show  rings  of  Kentucky  and  Missouri,  he 
was  not  defeated,  and  winning  the  grand  championship  against  aged 
horses.  Owned  by  .lames  Houchin,  Proprietor  of  Onward  Wilkes 
Farm,  Jefferson  City,  Mo. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


331 


CtENERAL  watts,  2:06?4 — CHAMPION  THREE-YEAR-OLD 
TROTTER  OF  1907-1910,  ANT)  WINNER  OF  FOUR  FUTURITIES. 
Making  record  as  sire  of  trotters.  Owned  by  General  C.  C.  Watts,  of 
Lexington,  Kentucky. 


YOUNG  BILL 
show  ring  record  in 
Sterling,  Kentucky. 


iaoxi    CHESTNUT    SADDLE    STALLION.      GieaL 
1911.     Owned  by  Emerald  Chief  Stock  Farm,  Mt. 


332 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


HAMBURG— THUROUGHBUlilD  STALLION.      Was  lor   y» 
head  of  the  premier  thoroughbred  horse  farm  in  Kentucky. 


ANNIE  DE  KOL  BUTTER  GIRL— HOLSTEIN  COW.  31.31 
pounds  of  butter  in  seven  days,  A.  R.  O.;  129. r.9  pounds  of  butter  in 
thirty  days,  A.  R.  O.;  101.1  pounds  milk  in  a  day;  2,595.9  pounds  of 
milk  in  thirty  days.  Owned  by  E.  A.  Powell,  Lakeside  Herd,  Syracuse, 
New  York. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS,  333 


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HERMES — THOROUGHBRED  STALLION.     Famous  for  all  the 
qualities  of  this  great  family  of  horses. 


334  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK     CIIAIMPIONS. 


UHLAN,  l:r)8%-  THE  TROTThXG  KING.  Black  gelding:  sire, 
Bingen,  2:t>(n4;  dam,  Blonde,  by  Sir  Walter,  .Tr.  Driven  to  his  record 
at  North  Randall,  Ohio,  August  12.  191(»,  by  Charles  Tanner. 


THE  TLMIVESTER.  2:01— WORLD'S  CHAMPION  TROTTING 
STALLION.  Foaled  in  190r>.  Sire,  Walnut  Hall.  2:()SVt;  dam, 
Notelet,  by  Moko.  Driven  to  his  record  at  Columbus,  Ohio,  September 
2:Jd,  1910,  by  Edward  F.  Geers.  Fastest  two  miles,  4:1514;  first, 
2:0Si^;   second,  2:0G%. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


335 


SAN  FRANCISCO,   2:07% — ONE  OF  THE  FASTEST  TROTTING 
STALLIONS  LIVING.      Walnut  Hall  Stock  F'arm,  Donerail,  Ky. 


Ak,^ 


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HAMBURG  BELLE,  2 :  01  %— WORLD'S  CHAMPION  RACING 
TROTTER.  Bay  mare;  sire,  Axworthy;  dam,  Sally  Simmons.  Driven 
to  her  record  at  North  Randall,  Ohio,  August  25th,  1909,  by  William 
J.  Andrews. 


336  THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


- 

J, 

.,'-•' 

AL 
splendid 

.A.\-A-1)AL1-:       FAM(U-S     TJ  ;•  "l,*  )1  ; ;  1 1 
lonroniiation  and  a  great  sire. 

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HAMPSHIRE  DOVVX  LAxMBS — TWO  OUT  OF  A  PEN  OF  THREE 
CHAMPIONS.     Owned  by  Walnut  Hall  Farm,  Donerail,  Ky. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS.  337 


CARROLL    PRESTON— KENTUCKY   SADDLE   STALLION.      Dis- 
tinguishing  himself   as   a   sire   and   in   show   ring.      Owned   by   W.   O. 

Walker,  Stamford,  Kentucliv. 


cor.xTRY     i\^,     J  "^s       worn. US     ciia:\ipiox    saddle 

TROTTER.      Chestnut    gelding.      Ridden    to    his    record    at    Syracuse, 
N.  Y.,  September  15th,  1909,  by  Ramey  Macey. 


33! 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


FIRE    ENGINE     HORSES- -ONE    OF    THE     GREAT    TRIOS    OF 
BOSTON,  MASS.      Photo  by  courtesy  of  Chief  of  Fire  Department  and 
Dr.  Daniel  P.  Keogh,  Veterinarian. 

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JAY    BIRD— FAMOUS    SIRE    OF    TROTTERS.      Second    picture 
taken  in  his  old  age  by  McClure,  of  Lexington,  Ky.      See  also  page  84. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


JACOBA  IRENE— JERSEY  COW.  Record  in  onp  year:  17,253.2 
pounds  milk,  Jir)2.96  ijounds  I'at,  equivalent  to  1,126  pounds  butter, 
tlie  highest  record  in  year's  test.  In  thirty-seven  consecutive  months 
she  produced  42,06.")  pounds  milk,  containing  2,331  pounds  fat,  equiv- 
alent to  2,7;'.. 5  i)ounds  butter.  This  cow  is  now  owned  by  F.  B. 
Keeney,  Premier  Farm,  Warsaw,  New  York. 


ELMHURST  CHIEF — GRAND  CHAMPION  LEICESTER  RAM  OF 
THE  THUMB  OF  MICHIGAN.  Weight,  300  pounds.  Sheared  19 
pounds  at  three  years  old.  Owned  at  Elmhurst  Stock  Farm,  Chaa.  B. 
Scully,  Proprietor,  Almont,  Michigan. 


340 


THE    rtOOK    OF    T/rVE    STOCK    CTTAIMPTONS. 


THE  BONDSMAN,  BY  BAKON  WILKES,  2:18.  Sire  of  trotters, 
having  thirty-four  sons  and  daughters,  standard  performers,  to  his 
credit. 


BEAU  ONWARD — HEREFORD  BULL.  Senior  and  grand  cham- 
pion at  the  Oklahoma  State  Fair,  1910  and  1911.  BEAU  ONWARD 
was  calved  P'ebruary,  1908,  Owned  and  exhibited  by  Klaus  Bros., 
Bendena,  Kansas. 


THE    BOOK    OP    LTVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


341 


MOKO,  24,457 — FAMOUS  SIRE  OF  TROTTERS.  Said  to  be  one 
of  three  greatest  living  sires.  MOKO  is  son  of  Baron  Wilkes,  and  on 
January  1st,  1912,  had  sired  fifty-three  trotters  and  seven  pacers  with 
records  in  standard  time.     At  Walnut  Hall  Farm,  Donerail,  Ky. 


BOB  AND  DAN — ONE  OF  THE  BEST  FIRE  ENGINE  TEAMS  AT 
SAN  FRANCISCO  AND  THE  FIRST  TO  BE  DISPLACED  BY  MOTOR 
APPARATUS,  FEBRUARY  16th,  1912.  By  courtesy  of  Thomas  F. 
Murphy.  Chief  Engineer,  San  Francisco  Fire  Department. 


342  THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


WALNUT  HALL,  2:  OS  %  — PAMOFS  SIRE  OP  TROTTERS.  Sire 
of  The  Harvester,  2:01.  \{  Waliiul  Hall  Parni.  DoiuMail,  Kv.  I'lioto 
by  McClure,  Lexington,  Kentucky. 


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HIOl)  WILKIOS,  15Y  (iEORGK  WILKES.  2 :  22— PAMOUS  SIRE  OP 
SFEEl)  HORSES.  In  two  generations  RED  WILKES  lias  1,396 
standard  performers  to  his  credit. 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


343 


^INDEX^ 

TO    THE 

Booko^Live  Stock  Champions-1912 


Page. 

Abbess    McHenry— Angus    Heifer 304 

Aberdeen-Angus    Herd — McHenry 317 

Aberdeen-Angus    Grade    Herd — McHenry. .221 
Active   Forest   King — Haokiioy   .Stallion.  ..  160 

Admiral    Dewey — Trolling   Siro SOO 

Admiral,      The- — Morgan      Stallion 1(12 

Advance- — (''ihampion     Stoer. S 

Advance     Guard — ^Sho-w     Stallion 110 

Aggie   Lad    Colatitlia — Holstoin    Bull ;!<t7 

Albany — Imported     Hereford     Bull 19 

Alexander     Bakewoll — .flydesdale  Stallion.   nO 

Alix — Trotting     Marc 248 

Allan-A-I)ale — Thoroughbred    Hor-se 33(> 

Allen   Winter — Famous   Trotter :!24 

Allerton — Trotting     Sire 274 

Allie     Nun — Champion     Roadster !t7 

A  merican  Merino  Ham — 'St.  Ijouis  Champion   90 
American    Starlight — ^Champion    Jiack....lol 

Andy — ^Aberdeen- Angus     Steer 10.''> 

Annie    Darling — Brown    Swiss    Cow 2SR 

Annie   De   Kol — Holstein    Cow ;fS2 

Antelope — Hunting      Horse 214 

Arion — Trotting      Stallion 227 


BUT'J'u.\\\  '  mjLp  iiJ<  IV,  ,111— <  DvMI'KKNJ 
RED  POLLED  STEER,  CHICAGO  LIVE 
STOCK  EXPOSITION  OF  1011.  Exhibited 
by    the  Iowa  State   College,   Ames,   Iowa. 

Artist    Montrose — ^Saddle    Stallion 43 

Ashmoor    Luther — SuffoUc     Stallion 282 

Astral    King — Saddle    Stallion 330 

Auchenbrian  White  Beauty — .\yr»hirc  Cow.250 

Axwortih> — Trotting    Sire 321 

Ayrsihire    Biull — Beaucha-n    Peter    Pan 272 

Ayrshire    Cattle — Best    Four 277 

Ayrs'hire     Cattle — CUse     Herd 204 

Banostine   Belle — Holstein   Cow 323 

Barbara     McHenry — Angus     Cow 8 

Barbara    McHenry — Angus    Cow 313 

Bargenock    Gay    Cavalier — Ayrshire    Bull. .144 

Baron    Clifton — ^Clydesdale    Stallion 116 

Baron    Duke — ^Berksihire    Boar 100 

Baron.    The — Carriage   Horse 206 

Baron's   Voucher — Clydesdale    Stallion  ....  1  2fi 

Beau    Onward — Hereford    Bull 340 

Beauty — Red     Polled     Cow 87 

Beauty — ^Shire     Mare 72 

Beef  Cattle — Angus     Steer.s 39 

Beef  Cattle — Black's     Ohampions 178 

Beef  Cattle — Cbampions 109 

Beef  Cattle — Champion    Steers 139 

Beef   Cattle — Fort   Worth  .  . .  .  : 313 

Beef  Cattle— Harris     Load... 28 

Beef  Cattle — ^Hereford     Yearaings 85 

Beef  Cattle — Hereford    Yearlings 200 


Beef  Cattle— Herrin     L/oad 

Beef  Cattle — Kerrick    Champions... 
Boof    Ciattle— Krambeck    Load 

Page. 

195 

40 

'I'W.I 

.state 
Hoove 


i;  \  H  I  iii.s  I  I  i:  WHITE  sow. 
cars  old  Champion  at  the  Illinoiis 
Fair,  1905.  Exhibited  by  W.  A. 
•,   of  Osikalo'osa,   Iowa. 


Beef  Cattle — Royal    Champions,    1911 152 

Beef  Cattle — ^Sansom     Load 273 

Beef  Cattle — -Texas     Load 147 

B(pf  CTlth-Twi   Year-Old  72 

Btlle    Ku      1        I  I     iini„'    Mate  J09 

Belle    M.          1  Ivdebdale   Maic  166 

Belle     \    ■!     il    I    I      lohanna — HoNtem  263 

1-!.  Ilmi       I  1        II         ^1  illion  .    93 

111  I    II  I      I    inv    Stdlhon  289 

III         I        I     1  Pen    of  192 

111  -  I     n    of  328 

I     I    II  I      I     M     I  I     \  I  1  ook — \nsus   Cow  96 

I     t'-N     I)      \   11(1        Belgian    Mare  190 

I  euthan    P<  ter    I'an — Avishiie   Bull  272 

I  ig    Mal^ — ^Chestci    Sow  248 

IMngen — 1  lotting     Sire  28 

Ringo — Polo     Pon\  48 

I'lAikhird     Jhth— \n8U^   Cow  212 

I  Irvckcap    McHeni> — Angu^    Heifer  315 


CLIFTON  —  CHAMPION  HEREFORD 
STEER  AT  THE  CHICAGO  INTERNA- 
TIONAL LIVE  STOCK  EXPOSITION,  1911. 
Exhibited  by  J.  P.  CUdahy,  Kansas  City,  Mo. 

Blackrock — Champion    Steer 310 

Blaisdon    Pluto— Shire    Horse 30 

Bob   and   Dan — Fire  Engine  Horses 341 


344 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


Page. 

Boghall    Snowdrop — Ayrshire    Cow 257 

Bondsman — Thoroug-hbred    Horse 340 

Bosnian's   Anna — .lersoy   Cow 306 

Bourbon    King — Saddle    Stallion 141 

Bradgate   Blue   Jacket — Shire    Horse 102 

Brahma    Cow — Champion    Female fi7 

Brilliant    D.^ — Perclieron    Stallion 144 

Brillianto— Belgian     Mare 81 

Britisher — Hereford    Bull 27 

British    Crlory — Shorthorn    Bull 11!» 

British    T>ion — High     Stc^ppor 2S7 

Bi-own     Hal — Pacing    Stallion 47 

Bucancer — Hackney      Gelding 194 

Buffalo   Skvlark    Ames — Holstein   Bull.  ...  297 

Buttonwood   Dick— Show   Steer 343 

Buzetta — French    Draft    Mare 244 

Callaway's    Pride — Chester    White     Pig...23.'5 


Cherry   Startle — Clydesdale   Mare 

Chester  White  Hogs — Champion     Load 
Chester    White    Pigs 


Page. 
..  .  21 
.  .  .    42 


CHAMPION  McDOUGAL  —  SHETLAND 
PONY  STALLION.  Winner  of  many  prizes, 
including  champiomship  at  the  Michigan 
State  Pair,  1909.  Exhibited  by  Geo.  A.  Heyl 
&  Son,  Washington,  111.  Afterwards  so«ld 
for   $1,500   ca.sih. 


Calypso — Pereheron     Stallion 224 

Cardon — Pereheron    Stallion 329 

Carlos    Victor — Berkshire     Boar 344 

Carmon — Trotting'     Stallion 215 

Carnot — Percli.  imu      Stallion 167 

Caron   Do   Bau  -15.  iKiaii   Stallion 330 

Carroll     Preston — Saddle     Horse 337 

Casino — Pereheron    Stallion 292 

Castille — I'eroheron      Mare 139 

Castor — Hereford     Bull 13.S 

Ceremonious    .Xrcher — Shorthorn    Bull,    76.192 

t^hallenger — Champion     Steer 174 

Chappie — Heavy     Hunter 199 

Charles    the    Great — 'Belted    Bull 19 

Charmille — Pereheron      Mare 217 


CAIil.i  .. 
BOAK. 
pounds. 
Pairs  and 
&  Moses, 


CHBVIOT  KWK  —  TWO  YEARS  OLD. 
Grand  chamjunn.  l.ouis,jana  Purchase  Expo- 
sition, 1904.  Exhibited  by  John  A.  Curry, 
of  Hartwick,   N.    Y. 

("hcsitor   Wliite    Swine — Dorsey's 236 

I'hi  stnut  -Slielland       PiHiy 65 

In  \  I..1      l':u.        I'll  iini I     344 

'    1..  \  i-l        K  nil       I'm,.     I   -       172 

'   1 1     .-I,.  .  |.       \.-.  .i      K.iiii 60 

■111.  run     .iiHl      .\I.iI.        i-.iriiage     T--im .  .  .  .  108 

'   K  -Shorlhorn    Bull.    26 213 

I   I  II. I     iIImUs — Ayrshire    C<nN 70 

'   1  II  I     11       i-he.ster    Sow 343 

I   Kill'-     <  IT  plian— .ler.sey     Bull 230 

ilin.iius     Dutch    Belted    Bull 88 

il..ir    Lake    .lute— Champion    Steer 89 

1  lili.iri    -Hereford     Steer 343 

>lMl. -dale   in    Harness 318 

C|\dosdalo     Team — Morris 46 

Coach     Horses— Bratton's 30 

CocU.   of   the   Walk — Guernsey    Hull 82 

Colantha,    4th's   Johanna — Hol-tein    Ci>w..259 

Coldham    Surprise — .Shire    Mare 154 

Colorado     E. — ^Trotter 113 

Ool-ston    Eclipse — Yorkshire    Boar 225 


DCROt^-JEHSEY 

B.XRROW 

—    GRAND 

CH.AMPION       AT 

NATIONAL 

WK  SATURN 

SHOW,     DENVER. 

COLO,,     191 

.      I5xhibited 

by     the     Agricultur 

il     (^.llege,     1 

^irt     Collins, 

Colorado. 

I'ook  lirst  prize  at  several  State 
at  St.  Louis.  Exhibited  by  Etzler 
of  Convoy,   Ohio. 


Columbia — -Chester     Siw 210 

Combination — Chester    White    Boar 292 

Commodore,     5th — Shire    Stallion 174 

Como    and    Lugano — Roadsters 151 

Confessor,    The — Polled    Durham    Bull.. ..121 

Corinne — Saddle     Mare 59 

Corrector     Fairfax — Hereford     Bull 276 

Cotswold     Ewe— McNeill's 16S 

Cotswold    Prize    Ewe 41 

Cotsvwold     Sheep — Aged     Ram 66 

Councillor — Chester     Boar 327 

Count     Abbott — .Shorthorn     Bull 145 

fount    Paul    De    Kol,    2(i — Holstein    Bull..    93 

Country    Jay — Saddle    Trotter 337 

Crenio — Red     Polled     Bull 269 

Cre.seeus— Trotting     Stallion 228 

Croftjane    Dinah — .\yrshire    Cow 232 

Crus.ader — Hereford     Bull 181 

Cuvon — Pereheron     Stallion 118 

Czar   of   River    Meadow — Jersey    Bull 62 

Dainty   of   Wavertree — A    Cow 185 


THE    BOOK    OP    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


345 


Page. 

Dairy     Cattle — Missouri 285 

Dairymaid  of  Pinehurst — Guernsey  Cow.  .304 
Daisy  Grace  De  Kol — Holstein  Cow 325 


ELIZABETH— A  SENIOR  GALLOWAY 
HEIFER  CALF  AND  .JUNIOR  AND  GRAND 
CHAMPION  AT  THE  ILLINOIS  STATE 
FAIR.  At  this  great  Fair  only  two  herds 
of  Galloways  were  shown,  and  both  \\  oro 
from  Iowa.  Bales  &  Son.  of  Stockport, 
Iowa,    exhiibited   ELIZABETH. 

Dale's    Viscount — ^Shorthorn    Bull U's 

Dandy   Jim,    2d — 'Saddle   Stallion liil 

Dan  Patch — ^Champion   Pacer,    219   and...  32  t 

Dan    Patdh — ^Shir©    Horse IfiS 

Dan — ^Stock    Yards    "Try    Horse." 11 

Day    Star — ^Famous    Jack SG 

Daytona — Thoroughbred     Mare 271 

Defender — Hereford     Bull 2M 

Deserter — ^Show     Steer 14S 

Diaz — ^Angus     Bull 24 

Dijkstra    Beauty    Lad — Holstein    Bull.... 255 
Dil'ham  Prime  Minister — Hackney  Stalilionk239 

Disiputer — ^Chamipion     Steer 117 

Disturber — Hereford    Calf 16 

Docil — Percheron     Stallion 75 

Dolly   Blo'om — -Guernsey   Cow 241 

Dolly   Dimple — Guernsey   Cow 204 

DoHy,    2d — Hereford   Oow 9 

Dolly,    5th — Hereford    Cow 9 

Ddlly  Dimple's  May  King  of  L 191 

Dominoe — Sihow    Pony 312 

Dorothea,    2d — ^Shorthorn    Cow 132 

Dorset     Sheep — ^Ohampions 148 

Draft   Team — Armour's    Six 319 

Draft    Team— Swift's    Four 197 

Draft   Team^Swift's   Six 79 

Dragon — ^Percheron    Stallion 153 

Drew — Clydesdale    Gelding 125 

Dr.    Selwonk — Carriage    Horse 234 

Druid   of  Castlemilk — Galloway    Bull 14 

Duchess    Ormsiby — ^Holstein    Cow 90 

Duchess,   II. — ^Shortihorn  Cow 23 


ELECTIONEER  —  FAMOUS  TROTTING 
SIRE.  By  Hambletonian.  Sire  of  Arion, 
2:07%;  Sunol,  2:08i4;  Palo  Alto,  2:08%;  and 
many  others  with  fast  records.  From,  pho- 
tograph picture  taken  in  1873  by  Schreiber 
&  Sone,   Philadelphia,   Pa. 


Page. 
Duke  of  River  Meadow — Brown   Swiss...   58 

Duroc-Jersey — Prize     Sow 63 

Duroc- Jersey   Boar — St.    Louis   Champion.    89 

Durock — Red    Polled    Bull 122 

Earl  of   Bombie^Clydesdale   Stallion 55 

Bciho,    2d — Dutch    Belted   Cow 92 

Edna — Angora   Doe 251 

Edna  Mae — Saddle   Mare 137 

Eel,     The — Pacing     .Stallion 231 

Electioneer — ^Trot-ting     Sire 345 

Elizabeth — Galloway      Heifer. 345 

Elmdene    King — Tarn  worth    Boar 161 

Elimhupst    Chief — Leicester    Ram 339 

HmWy — Saddle    Mare 251 

Eminent's    Raleigh — Jersey    Bull 261 

Endymyon — Guernsey    Bull 142 

Enfield    Nipper — Pony    Stallion 286 

Englewood'.s    Fireman — Tamworth    Boar.. 314 
Enithorpe    Performer — Hackney    Horse.. ..182 

Eph— Red    Polled    Bull 231 

Eric,    7th — Angus  Bull 240 

Esmeralda — French    COach    Mare 242 

Ethan    Allen— Tro-tting    Stallion 26 

Eurotas' — Jersey    Cow 345 


EUROTAS,    2.4r,4 -JKItSi:^     '-.'  K.rord. 

778    pounds    of    butter    in    om-    yiar.  Owned 

by    the    late    A.     B.    Darling,    Fifth  Avenue 
Hotel,    New   York. 

Evaline,    2d,    of  A. — Galloway  Cow 211 

Export — Chester    Boar 345 

Express  Boy — Poland-China  Boar 206 

Pair    Queen — ^Shorthorn    Cow,    165 198 

Pakenham    Princess — Hackney    Mare 160 

Falsetto    the   Last — Red    Polled    Bull 275 

Fancy — Berkishire     Sow 318 

Fannie  DiHard — A  Pacer ISO 

Pat     Barrows — Berkshires 293 

Fat   Wethers — Denver   Champions 258 

Favorite^ — Percheron    Stallion 200 

Fay  Jewel   Beauty — ^Hollstein  Cow 270 

Fern    Ayr — Ayrshire   Cow 247 

Figgis — Jersey     Oow 233 

Financial   Countess — ^Jersey  Cow 25 

Fire  Engine  Horses — Boston 338 


EXPORT — CHESTER  WHITE  BOAR.  As 
a  two-year-old  weighed  700  pounds;  was 
sweepstakes  winner  at  the  St.  Louis  Fair. 
Exhibited  by  J.  W.  Dorsey  &  Sons,  of  Perry, 
111.  The  St.  Louis  Fair  referred  to  is  the 
Great   St.   Liouis  Fair,   first  opened   in  1856. 


Fire  Engine  Horses — Indianapolis 316 

Fire    Engine    Horses — San    Francisco 341 

Fire   Engine    Horses — World's   Champions. 256 


346 


THE    ROOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


Pagp. 

Flora,    90lh — Shorthorn    Cow 1 S7 

Pluck's    Expectation — Hereford    Steer. ..  .2or, 
Flying  Fox— Jersey  Bull 299 


FROLIC  —  SHETI.,AND  PONY  MAFtE. 
Four  years  old.  Grand  champion  mare  at 
the  I.,ouisiana  Purchase  Exposition,  1904. 
Owned  and  exhibited  by  Charles  E.  Bunn, 
of   Peoria,    111. 


Folie — Brown    .Swiss    Cow ^l!i 

Fontalni-'s   Cliieftain — .lorsey    Bull '.i^-i 

Forest    King— HacUnt-y    Horse 2:il) 

Frenchman.    The— Saddle    Celding U9 

Frisk    Prince — Clydesdale    Stalilun 297 

Frisson — Percheron    Stallion 171 

Frolic^Shetland     Pony :{4t; 

Fronton — ^Percheron    Stallion 2.ir, 

Fyfle    Knight lfi« 

Gainford    Manniis      Shnrthurn    I'.ull :!"2 

Garnet     Ripiil.       Ilnin.i «0 

Gascon — ^E'ercli.i .  .n     .'-;i:illion 147 

Gay    I>;ul.    <itli      ll.i.lu.l    IJull IXS 

General    Pface--TlK.rc)UKliljred 21)7 

General    Watt.*— Trotter :{:il 

Geneseo    Bell    Pcdkadot — Dairy    Cow 278 

George  Wilke.s — Trotting   Sire 21)2 

Gingerbread     Man — 'Saddle     Horse 346 

Glacis — Peix-heron     Stallion 203 

Glady's    Fizzaway— Holstein    Cow 263 

Glencoe's    Bopeep — Guernsey    Ci^\v 2.t9 

Glenfoil    Thickset.    2d — Angus    Bull 8 


Page. 

Golden   Ben — Guernsey   Bull ISO 

Golden  Fern's  l^d — Jersey  Bull 220 

Golden    Gauntlet — Polled    Durham    Bull..    20 

Golden    Glow — Saddler 346 

;<ililen   Heather — Polled  Durham  Cow....    54 

o.lden    Hero— Polled    Durham    Bull 308 

inl.len    M..n    Pl.aislr •. r.9 

Joldsniith's     Maid — Trotting     Queen 96 

'.iM.d    E   NufC   Again — Duroo    Boar 167 

ioodwin — Saddle    Stallion 50 

Iraham   of   Avondale — A    Galloway 183 

;reat    Scot's  Champion — .Tersey   Cow 308 

Juernsey    Champion — Guernsey   Bull 223 


m   4 


GOLDEN  GLOW  —  CHESTNITT  SADDLE 
MAKE.  15.2  hands  high;  daughter  of  Rex 
Peavine.  a  son  of  Rex  McDonald.  Sold 
recently  for  $2,100  at  Lexington.  Ky.,  to 
Mr.  Chester  W.  Ohapin.  of  New  York  City. 
The  price  is  said  to  be  the  highest  ever  paid 
for  a  saddle  mare  at  auction. 

Gypsy   of   Racine — Guernsey   Cow 36 

Gypsy   Queen — Saddle  Mare 238 

Hambletonian— Trotting    Sire 71 

Hamburg  Belle — Racing  Champion 335 

Hamburg — Thoroughbred    Horse 332 

Hamlet — Chester  Wbite   Boar 15 

Hampsihire  Barrow.s-^Pen    of 262 

Hampsihire  Down    Ram 40 

Hampshire  Down — Yearling    Ram 20 

Hampshire     Lambs — Kentucd<y 336 

Hampshire  Sheep — Pen    of 177 

Hampshire  Sheep — .South     American 197 

Hannil>al — German    Coach    Stallion 69 

Happy     Medium — Trotting     Sire 347 


GINGERBREAD  MAN— SADDLE  GEL- 
DING. Winner  of  six  championships  and 
other  prizes  in  1911.  Owned  by  T.  H,  Son- 
nenburg,  St.  Louis,  Mo.  Ridden  by  Mr. 
J  no.  T.   Hook. 


.\T1U.\.\L  L1\K  .STU'-R  KXi'OSITION, 
11.  Exhibited  by  the  Kansas  Agrlcullural 
dle^ge.    Manhattan,    Kansas. 


Harry  of   Maple*- — Galloway   Steer 346 

Harvester,    The — Trotting    Stallion 334 

Hattle   Seek — Duroc-Jersey   Sow 347 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


347 


Page. 

Hautbois — Percheron    Stallion 109 

Hoiwthorne — Shire    Yearling 1S3 

Haye«   Rosie — Imported   Guernsey   Cow...  136 


HAPPY  MEDIUM,  2  .32 '1— TROTTINcJ 
SIRE,  By  Hambletonian.  Sire  of  Naniy 
Hanks,  2:04;  Riley  Medium,  2:10U:  Maxie 
Cobb.  2:131/4;  and  many  others  in  the  2.ir> 
list.  From  copyright  photo  by  pernii.=ision  of 
Schreiber   &    Son.'i,    of   Philadelphia,    l^a. 

Heatherblcom — Jumper,     27 1 1'>" 

Heaviest    Steer   on    Record 3r> 

Hereford    Calves — Jno.    Hooker's 120 

Hereford  Herd — Curtice ISfi 

Hereford  Herd — Funkhouser .')3 

Hereford  Herd — lAice    &    Moxley lOL' 

Hereford  Herd— Tho.s.    Clark's 10 

Hereford  Herd— Van    Natta 165 

Hereford  Prize    Calves 4.'^ 

Hereford  Steer     Calves — lyoad 74 

Hermes — Thoroughbred     Stallion 333 

Hetide — A    Jack 206 

Highball— Trotter 138 

High   Clere   Countess — Berkshire   Sow 238 

Highland    Flower — Saddle    Stallion 13 

HUdred — Harness  Mare,   149  and 306 

Hllldale    Chief— Berkshire    Boar 216 

Hood  Farm  Torono — Jersey  Bull 201 

Horace,    Jur^ior — ^Hackney    Stallion 253 

Howie's    Emerald — Ayrshire    Heifer 123 

Howie's     Ladylike 272 

Hulot — Percheron    Stallion 347 

Ida   Marigold — Jersey    Cow 239 

Ida  of  St.   Lambert — ^Jersey   Cow 347 

Ildefonse — Percheron    Stallion 222 

Imperial     Yeoman — Oxford     Kam 222 

Imported    Jap — Jersey    Bull 35 

Imported    Yeoman — Guernsey    Bull 140 

Imprecation — Percheron     StaMion 22 

Improver — Hereford    Bull 70 

Improver — ^Poland-China     Boar 119 

Imprudente — Percheron     Mare 262 

IncUise — Percheron    Stallion 152 

Inedit — Percheron      Stallion 222 

Inga's   Girl — -Angus    Cow 240 

Intelligent — Percheron     Stallion.  .". 222 

International  W-ethers,   1910 . Ill 


HATTIE  SECK— DUROC-JERSEY  SOW. 
As  a  yearling,  weighing  500  pounds.  Won 
sweepsvtakes  at  the  St.  Ix)uis  Fair.  Exhib- 
U^  by  N.  B.  Cutler,  of  Carthage.  HU 


Page. 

Intime — Perdheron     Stallion 121 

lo'lanthe — Percheron    Mare 169 

Ismail — PercJheron     Stallion 222 

Itchen   Daisy,    3d — Guernsey   Cow 244 

Jack    O'    DiamoTid.s — Che.stnut    Gelding.  ..  145 

.lacoba    Irene — Jersey    Cow 339 

.lap — Imported   Jersey   Bull 35 

Jaunita — Poland-China  Sow,    1  29 132 

Jay   Bird — Trotting   Sire,    S4   and 338 

Jersey  Belle  of  Sc4tuate 201 

Jersey    Cattle — -Cihampion    Herd 151 

,|prseys   at    Biltmore 301 

Jersey   Venture — 'Jer-sey    Cow 196 

Jewel    of    Farm   Home — Holstein    Bull.... 180 
.1.    F.'s    Model — Duroc-Jersey    Sow 233 


HULOT — PERCHERON  STALLION.  Cham- 
pion any  age  or  breed  at  the  Fort  Worth 
Breeders'  and  Feeders'  Show.  1912.  Exhib- 
ited by  J.   Crouch   &  Son,   Lafayette,   Ind. 


Jim    Crow — ^Middle-Weiglit   Hunter 95 

Joe   Patchen — ^Pacing    Stallion 208 

Joihanna    Bonheur — Holsitein    Cow 2S2 

John   A.   McKerron — Trotting   Stallion.  ..  .195 

John   R.    Gentry — Pacer,    56 254 

Jolie    Johanna — Holstein    Cow 245 

Jubilee   King — SaiMlo   <'oU 348 

Junker — Brown    Swiss   IJnll 131 

Jupiter — Belgian      Slalii.Hi 209 

Jureur — Perch  im-mh    Slalli.m 261 

Juridique — Percheron    StaliMon 264 

Kellerman.    II. — P«rc)heron    Stallion 258 

Kelver's   Best — Poland-China   Sow 129 

Kentucky's    Choice 32s 

Keswick — Light-Weight     Hunter 100 


IDA  OF  ST.  LAMBERT— JERSEY  COW. 
Reputed  record,  63  pounds  of  milk  in  one 
dav,  30  pounds  and  some  ounces  butter  in 
4<even  days.  Owned  by  Miller  &  Sibley,  of 
Franklin,    Pa, 


King  Alar — Trotting  Stallion 67 

King    Cromwell— Angora    Goat 326 

King   Cumberland- Shorthoru    BuU 117 


348 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


Page. 

King    Marvie — Berkshire   Boar 47 

King  of  Sierra — Angora  Goat 181 

King  of  tlie   I'ontiacs — Holstein   Bull 311 


rage 

Ixinewood  Boy — Devon  Bull -71 

Lord    Belfast — Hackney    Horse :;40 

Lord    Brilliant — Carriage    Horse 1S7 

Lrord    Burleigh — Hackney    Horse 2:{7 

Lord    Golden — ^Carriage    Horse 1S7 

lX)rd    Mar — tluernsey    Bull i:!7 

I^iord    Stranford — Guernsey    Bull SI! 

I<or<'tta    D. — Jersey    Oow 223 

I>orna   i:)oone — Hereford  Cnw,   Ifil ItiS 

Lou    Dillon — Trotting    Queen,     lfi3 1S.'> 

Lnufo< I'erchoron     Stallion 74 

I.ucinda's    Boy — Ayrshire    Hull 194 

l.Uk'ano    and    <\»mo — Koadsters 151 

Lula — Dairy     Shorthorn 2(!tt 

McAlistcr's    Bett> — Ayrs-hire    Cow 30'J 

McDougal  — Shetland     Pony 341 

iM(■Kinl^>^ — Hackney     Stallion 235 


.irHILKlO  KINi;  S\Ii|>!.l-:  cdI.T.  Poal 
of  litll.  Alnadv  winner  of  lirst  prizes  at 
leading  Blue  Grass  Fairs.  Bred  and  owned 
by  J.  F.  Barbee.  MUllersburg.  Bourbon 
county.    Kentucky. 

King— Red    Polled    Steer 290 

Kloman — Aberdeen-Angus    Bull 278 

Lady    Briton — Hereford   Cow 37 

I,ady  Clarence — Dutch  Belted   Cow 11 

Lady  de  Vries — Holstein   Cow 12 

Lady   Eccles — Show   Pony 314 

l>ady    EfTie — Clydesdale    Mare 114 

Ladv    Elegant — Clydesdale   Filly 62 

Lady    Fragrant — ^S«iorthorn    Cow 130 

Lady    Hughes — Saddle    Mare 181 

]>adylike — Clydesdale    Mare 142 

I.^dvlike — Galloway     Cow 280 

Lady   of  Meadowbrook — Angus  Cow 221 

Ladv    Seaton — Hackney    Mare 135 

Ladv   Sharon,   4th — Shorthorn   Cow 13 

Ladv   Viola — .Jersey    Cow 246 

Lakeside    Model    King— Holstein    Bull 322 

Landseer's    Fancy — .Jersey    Cow 213 

Jjuss,    40th — Jersey   Oow 249 

Lavender  Viscount — Shorthorn   Bull 80 

Layia  of  Glamis— Angus  Heifer 51 

I.,azarus — Angora     Goat 8- 

Leicester  Ram — Chicago  World's  Fair 34 

Leonora — A    Roadster .24o 

Lessnessock's  First  Choice — Ayrshire  bull. 249 

Letty   Lee — A   Roadster 243 

Lexington — Thoroughbred    Horse 29  8 

Lilly    Ella — Guernsey    Cow 15 

Limestone     Mammoth — Jack 301 

Lincoln    Siheep — Aged   Ewe 17 

Lincoln     Shee^p — Argentine 310 

I.,incoln    Sheep — ^Champion     Ram 86 

lyincoln  .Sheep — Ram   and   Ewe 226 

Lincoln   Sheep — Winning    Flock 81 

Little   Bov   Perfect — Pony 41 

Lively    Beeswing — Champion    Hackney ....  127 
I>ockhart   De   Kol— Holstein   Cow 298 


MASCOT.  2:04— PACING  GELDING.  In 
the  vear  1892,  for  the  first  time,  a  trotter. 
Nancy  Hanks,  and  a  pacer,  MASCOT,  divided 
the  honor  of  being  the  fastest  light-harness 
performer. 

McKusick — Harness     Pony 94 

Major    Delmar — Champion    Trotter 205 

Maple   Leaf   Shadeland — Hereford   Bull... 227 

Margaret— Hereford    Cow.    124 217 

Marker — Red  Palled   Bull 296 

Market   Hogs — Champion   Load 135 

Market   Hogs — Heavy   Load 106 

Market    Hogs — Top    Price 45 

Martin   de    Cappelle — ^Belgian    Stallion 140 

Martin    du    Hayoir — 'Belgian    Stallion 122 

Mary  Anne   of   St.    Lambert 348 

Marv    Marvsihall— Guernsey    Cow 56 

Mascot — Pacing    Geilding 348 

Masher's    Sequel — Guernsey    Bull 24;. 

Master  of  the   Grove — Shorthorn   Bull.... 254 
Matilda — Jersey    Co'W 34S 


MARY  ANNE  OP  ST.  LAMBERT  — 
JERSEY  COW.  Claimed  to  have  made  3C 
pounds  12  ounces  of  butter  in  one  week;  836 
jx.unds  in  one  year.  Owne<l  at  that  time  by 
Valancey  E.  Fuller,  of  Hamilton,  Ontario, 
Oa.Da.da.     Froon   Schrelber    Photo,    1882. 


MATILDA,  4th — JERSEY  COW.  Made  a 
great  private  butter  record  before  official 
tesits  were  in  order.  Owned  by  Miller  & 
Sibley,  of  Franklin,  Pa.  From  photograph 
by  Schreiber  &  Sons,   Philadelphia,   Pa, 

Maud  S.— Trotting  Queen 189 

Mazemoor  Harold — ^Shire   Horse 107 

Meddler.   The— Poland-Ohina  Boar 209 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


349 


Meddler- 
Mercedes 
Merino    R 


-Thoroushbred 
Julips   Pieterje- 
am — World's   F 


Page. 

Horse 150 

— H'olstein   Cow..    66 
lir .3  4;( 


MERINO      R.\M    —    TWO      YEARS 
t'.rand   champion,    I.,(ui-itina   Purchase 
.-ition,    St.    Louis,    lfl()4.      JOxliibited    by 
Williani.son.   of  Xenia,   Ohio. 

OLD. 
Expo- 
R.    D. 

Merry    Hampton — Sihorthorn   Bull 61 

Merry   Maiden'.s   3d   Son — Jer.sey    Bu.ll 26.5 

Meteor    Morgan — Morgan    Stallion 2Sn 

Meteor — Saddle    Horse 21L' 

Mctztror's   Dude — I'oland-Cliiiia   Boar IJl.'i 

Military     IIor.se — Cuban 1  2S 

Minno — German    (^oach    Stallion 277 

Minor    Heir — Pacing   Stallion 321 

Missie — Shorthorn    Heifer 3S 

Mis99  Ollie — Ayr.shiro  Cow S3 

Mi.'jsouri    Chief — ^Holstein    Bull 274 

M.issouri   Chief   Josephine— Dairy    Cow.... 279 

Missouri    Girl — Duroc-Jersey    C\jw 127 

M'i-ssouri  Josephine  Sarcastic — Holstein  C\)w3  t!) 

Mi.ssouri    King — ^Saddle    Stallion 123 

Mi.ss    Stokes — Trotting    Mare 3  23 

Mistresspiecc — Berkshire     Sow 162 

Model    Jim — Essex    Boar 3-4;) 

Mod.ic.sika — French   Coach   Mare 220 

Moko — Trotting    Sire 311 

Monarch — Famous    Jack SS 

Mon    Gros — Belgian    Stallion 2.S6 

Montgomery    Chief — Saddle    Stallion 26ri 

Moriuette — Trotting     Stallion .SS 

Mouvette — -Percheron     Mare 4  1 

Mule.s — .Famous     Five ISS 

My     Choice — Aberdeen-Angus     Steer 108 

My    Lady    Dainty — Head 6 

Myrtle  of   Maples — ^Galloway   Cow 279 

Nancy    Hankis — Troling    Mare,    91 98 

Nether    Baron — Clydesdale    Stallion 192 

Netherhall    Brownie — A>Tshire    fow 303 

Netherlca — Olydesdale    Horse 7 

News    Boy — Light    Harness    Horse 229 

Noble    of   Oaklands — Jersey    Bull 211 


MISSOURI      JOSE3FHINE       SARCAiSTIC— 
DAUGHTER         OF         MISSOURI  CHIEF 

JOSEPHINE.  Milk  record  for  siix  months, 
as  a  two-year-old:  7,037  pounds^  This  is 
334  pounds  higher  than  her  dam's  record  at 
the  sam«  age.  Bred  and  owned  by  the 
University  of  Missouri. 


Nonpareil,    44fch — Shorthorn    Cow 103 

Nonpareil    of   Clover   Blossom 88 

Oakville  Quiet   Lad — ^Angus  Bull 330 

Oldhall    Ladysmith,    4th — Avrsliiro    Cow.. 257 

Olga    4th's    Pride — Jersey    Cow 311 

Omer — Belgian     Stallion 92 

Onetta — Brown     Swiss    Cow 176 

Onward,    4th — Hereford   Bull,    0 32 

Orangiste — Percheron     Stallion 49 

Ornament — Thoroughbred     Horse 221 

<  Mii)ian     Boy — ^Champion    Jack 226 

iixr..i(i    Down     Ewe — Champion     1911 US 

iixf.Td   Down    Ram — .Chamijion     1911 141 

<)Nrnril   Down    Sheep — Yearling    Rjiin 17 

Oxford    Down — Yearling   Ram 63 

Paladin — French    Coach    Horse 22 

Parthena    Hengerveld — Hol.sHein    Cow 161 

Pasha    Columbia — Angora    (^.oat 14 

Paul    Sold.ene    de    Kol — Holstein    Bull 133 

Pawnee   Oh.ief   Hadley — Bnar 170 


.1      ^1 


MODEL  JIM,  1,081— ESSEX  BOAR.  First- 
prize  and  sweepstakes  winner  at  the  St. 
I>ouis  Fair,  both  years,  1901  and  1902;  also 
winner  of  many  other  first  prizes.  Never 
defeated  In  the  show  ring.  Bred  and  owned 
by   Poter  Miller  &  Son,   of  Belleville,   111. 


Pedro — Jersey    Bull 193 

Pedro."?    Estolla — Jersey    Cow 283 

Peerless   Wilton,    39th's,   Defender 186 

"I'ercheron    Countenance." 52 

l'ercheix)n     Pair — -Texas 350 

Perfection — A    .lennet 173 

Perfection — French   Coach    Stallion 115 

Perfection — Hereford    Bull 166 

Perfection   Lasts — Hereford    Heifer 291 

Peiterj    Prince    McKean — Holstein    Bull...    35 

I'eter    Sterling — Angus    Bull 104 

Peter   the   Great — Trotting  Sire 273 

I'etrolcum — ^Saddle    Horse 293 

Picket — Thoroughbred    Horse 176 

Piotept.ie   Maid    Ormsby — Holstein   Cow...    31 

Pink    Daisv — Ayrshire    Cow 97 

Pink — Percheron    Stallion 155 

I'ink — Percheron    Stallion 175 

Poetry   of   Motion — ^Saddle    Horse 327 

Poland-China    T5oa.r — Burgess    Bros 84 


^ 


hmM 


PRIDE  OF  AVON— AYRSHIRE  BULL. 
Champion  at  Detroit,  1911;  champion  and 
grand  champion  Grand  Rapids.  Mich.;  also 
champion  at  Arizona  Fair,  Phoenix.  1910 
and  1911.  Exh.ibited  by  W.  A.  Macdonald, 
Mesa,   Arizona. 

Poland-Ohinas — Pair     of 129 

Polled  Dunham — Pair  of  Champions 69 

Polly   Prim — Carriage   Horse 305 


3r,o 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CtlAMPIOXS. 


Page. 

Poison— Hereford    Bull 2t 

Ponliac  Cl»thilde   Dp    Kol.    I'd— Holstein.  .112 
Pour-Quois-Pas — Percheron     Stallion 12 


PniN("E«S.  2d.  R.n»6— JKUSRY  Ct)\V. 
UcputPd  record,  •!•;  pounds  ]2</2  oun(-o.s  of 
butter  in  seven  day.>*.  Ownctl  by  the  late 
S.  M.  Shoemaker,  of  Baltimore.  Md.  From 
copvright  pihotograph  hy  permisision  of 
Hthreiber   &   Sons,    of   Philadelphia,    Pa. 


Prairie    Queen — Hereford    Cow 116 

Premii  r    I^onRfellow — Berkshire    Boar.  . . .  237 

President.    The — ^CaniaKe    Horse 2!ir. 

Pretty    Pet — Devon    Cow 22S 

Pride  of  .\von— .\yr.si1iire  Cow 3  l!i 

I'ride's    Olpa,    4th— Jersey    C.iw 'u 

Prime   I>ad — Hereford    Bull.    1«1,    Ui.'i -11 

Prime  Ivad.    flth — Hereford   Bull 143 

Primrose    Tricksey — Ouornsey    Cow l.^J 

l^rince    Alert — Paeins    CioUlinK 2i)7 

Prince    Charming — ^Saddle    Horse r>S 

Prince  Ito,    2d — Annus  Bull 21S 

J'riiice   of   Wales — Slictlan.l    Stallion 30 

Prince  of  Wihitehoiisc--Cl\  d.sdale  Stallion. 217 

Prince   A\'!illiam — ciydrs.lalr    llcrse l.S 

Princeps   l^iLssie — Hircford    Cow 120 

Princess    Kortuiu-    I'lydrsdnlr    Mar.- L'7r, 

Prince^>«   Hands.. nu'      civil. siliil.-   IMai.  ..  ..     12 

Prince<5??  Marsliall     -Slii.rl  li..i'ii    C.w 'JIil 

Princess  of  M..iil.i(y — AnK..ra   C.iat r.ii 

Princess  Salatin(>  <'arlotta — Holstein    Cow.ljiifi 
i'rlncess,    2d — ,1  ersey   Cow 3.">0 


Page. 

Protection   Chief — Cliester  Boar 316 

I'rudalia — Tamworth     Sow 65 

Que.  n    r-:.«lher — K.ss.'X    Sow 350 

tin.  .Illy — ^llereford     H.ifer 23 

tiueen   of   Beauty — .'-Shorthorn   Cow 16". 

Queen  of    Oiamonds — llaekney    Mare 120 

Queen  of    Miami — ^P.)lli-d    Durham    <''ow  .  .  .ILI 

Paleigh's    Fairy    Boy  — .ler.sey    Bull 307 

Uaml.ouillet   Sheep — -Cliampion    Ewe 98 

Hare    Beauty— Shorthorn    Heifer 1S4 

K<<l    Cloufl — Sli.iw    Hor.se    Champion Ill 

I!. (liar — 'I'rottInK     Sire 2^fi 

li.il     McDonald— .Sad. lie    Stallion 322 

|{(  <1      I'rince — Thoroughbred     Stallion 250 

Kid    Wilkes — Trotting    Sire 34L' 

Ucna     It. fss— Ayrshire    Cow 134 

U.iiilalsh.am     A  ll.ert- Suffolk     Stallion 64 

K.p.al.M-    ll.r.f..rd      Dull 12i< 

Ke.\   Arbuckl. — ^SacUII.-   Stallion 133 


QUEEN  ESTHEU.  3,(p3S— ESSEX  SOW. 
I'Mrst-prize  winner  and  sweep.s-takes  .sow  at 
the  St.  Txiuis  Fair,  ■1!(02.  the  only  time 
shown.  Her  pigs  were  first-prize  winners  in 
IflOl.  alsio  in  1902.  Bred  and  owned  by 
Peter  Miller  &  Son,   of  Belleville,   111. 

Kex  Denmark,   .lun.ior^^addle   Stallion  ...  216 
Hex  McDonald — Swddle   Stallion.   6S  and..  325 

Kins-master — 'Shorthorn     Champion 110 

Kival's  Champion's  Be.sit — Berkshire   Boar.   55 

Kival's     I/a!^t — Berk-sihire    Boar 182 

K..a.n    Hero— Polled    Bull 175 

Kf.an  King — -Cirand  Olia.mpion   Steer 31 

Koan    Sultan— Shorthorn   Bull 204 

Robert   .T. — Pacer 56 

Robert    Waddell — Thoroughbred    Horse...    78 

Rock    Sand — Thoi-viughbred    Hor.se 333 

Kolan.1      Tprchrron      Stallion 159 

C.oat 170 

6.". 

K.is..    .1.  iM,;i       AM-shire    Cow 

K..^.     ..I     l.auKuat.r- C.uernsey    Heifer 207 

K..S,.    Whirlwind — Saddle    Stallion 64 

!!<.u.cre.    II. — Guernsey    Cow ^^ 294 


PAIR  PERCHERON  MARES.— Sold  to 
Jolin  H.  Wray,  of  Fort  Worth,  Texa-s,  for 
$2,400  by  .1.  Crouch  &  Son.  after  winning  tlie 
Jiighetrt  prizes  at  the  Dallas  State  Fair,  1911. 
and  at  the  National  Breedtjrs'  and  Feodcrs" 
SlJQW  of  19X1. 


performance     was     iiiaile     at     Oakland,     Cal. 
He  was  a.  bay   gelding  by  Volunteer. 

Royal    Flora— P.dled    Durham    Cow 136 

Roval    Crey— Shire    Stallion 158 

Royal    Miiusk — Thoroughbred 270 


THE    BOOK    OF    T.IVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


351 


Ro\aI 
Rubei 
Ruby 


Queen — ^Pullecl    Dm  ham    Cow 
ta — Shorthorn     Cow 
of  Buttonwood — Polled   Durham 


ii 


1  ccoi  (I        I      I     nn  I 

bleed  it    III      I     mil 

1004  I  \lnl  It     1      1  \ 

Maple  Lodge    untan 


-Polled  Durham    77 


Rub\    of  Buttonwood    2d- 
Rub\      id — ^De\    n   t  o\\ 
Kutli — Peiohei    u     M  11 
Rv^dKk  s     H  mil  I    t    111  111 
Sartic   Vale   (     i       i  li  i      II 

Sllls)  Ul\— Illll      II      I     II     I 

^    111    I  II  \I      I  11       SI    llll 


S(   ilili    Pink  Pice  Shctp 
Srottish   Belle     4th — Polled   Dui  Inni 
Scottish  Chief    3d— G-alliiA\a\    Bull 
Sitvttish    Lassne — Heicfud    Cow 
Siotllea    Oiedil    i      (  li      t    i     B.ni 
Sensation — eu  1      1  il        1 1    i  se 
Sliadyhiook    (     il     i  u    i  nse\    t    iw 

c!h  uiiioik — (  !i  II     I  1    11      SI    ,  1 


frrrmi 


Pasre. 

Sihow    Mule-i — Famous   Five 1S8 

shiopshue    Grade    Wether 283 

shropshue    Rain— Imported,    1911 107 

shiopshne  Shee-p — In  Show 49 

shi  ipshiie  Yearling-  Ram 23 

suU  lisht— Sho'rthorn     Bull 124 

si-,nil    of   M'aple   Grove — Ayrsiliire 189 

sil\    1  me    CooTnasisie — ^Jersey    Bull IC 

siu.i    seciet — ■Polled    Durham    Bull 105 

sm  \t  «in — (  oach    Horse 177 

sii     \n  lifw— Highland   Bull 252 

sii     Ptdntie — Saddle   Gelding 57 

su    Beets    Cornucopia — Holstein    Bull 113 

Sir    Bouibon — ^Saddle    Oolt 99 

Sir    Maicus — Clydesdale    Stallion 130 

■Solomon — Belgian    Stallion 184 

<^-)noma    Girl— Trotting    Mare 143 

s-iphi       11th — .Tri-s.'y   Cow inr, 

s    nth  I    w  n    Slicp  — (^ihampion    Pen 15:! 

s    iitlul    w  u      Willnr lif.l 

-P      ul  It    1— S'lu.rtliiirn    Bull •!« 


SI  \M  ]  V  OK  M\PM':S-A  VI.MLLIXC, 
GA.LL()\\  VV  mil.l..  Junior  and  grand 
champion  of  the  Galloways  at  the  Illinois 
State  Pan  of  1909.  Exhibited  by  C.  S. 
Hechtnei  of  Chariton,  Iowa.  At  the  Amer- 
ican Ro\al  Show  this  young  bull  was  fir.st 
in   his  class. 


Spoils   of   the  Times — Saddle  Horse 198 

sp  itsw  >   d    Daisy    Pearl — Guernsey    Cow.. 305 

St      lulu  n— Trotting    Star 350 

St      T   uiil  Pit's    Riotreiss — Je-rsey    Cow 295 

'^t  xn  111  il    l"'avorite — Galloway    Bull 154 

stinh\    of   Maples — Galloway   Bull 351 

Stai    H  x\ —  V   Pacer ■ 179 

Stai  light — Hacknev     Stallion 320 

Stai    of   the   North — Shorthorn   Bull 290 

«tai    Pointer — A    Pacer 20S 

Star    Shoot — Thoroughbred    Stallion 32G 

Success' — Merino     Ram 232 

Sudbouine   Ruby — Suffolk    Mare 281 

«uffolk   Sheep— Pen   of  Wethers 71 

suke  of  Rosendale — Guernsey   Cow 25 

bultan — -Angora     Buck 242 

Sultan    Mine— Sdiorthorn    Bull 103 

sultan    of    Oaklands — .Jersey    Cow 294 

suit  ins    Cieed -rPoUed    Durham    Bull....  131 
ultan  s    Dark    Beauty — .Jersey    Cow 256 


si  ii'-riii  "  i\\  .\  w  I,  ill  1  i;     I ,  L 

I'loN,         \\  KS'l'l'Mt.N  XATIDNAI,        .SHOW, 

DENVER.     COI.O.,     1912.     Exhiihited    by    the 
Agricultural   College,   Fort   Collins,   Colorado. 


TOTtMENTOK.  3,533— IM  POllTEIi  .lERSET 
lUILJ.,.  Owned  by  the  late  Major  Campbell 
IJrown,    of  Spring   Hill,   Tenne.ssee. 

Sunol — Trotting     Mare 246 

Sunny   U.    J. — Hereford    Bull 157 

Surveyor — Shlre     Stallion 146 


352 


THE    BOOK    OF    LIVE    STOCK    CHAMPIONS. 


Sweet 
Swpet 
Sweet 


Page. 
Briar  of  Tj.  H. — Guernsey  Cow....   78 

Marie — OarriaBC   Horse 305 

Marie— Trotting:  Mare : . .  .303 


Page. 

William    Penn — Colt    Trotter 352 

Willownifior     Brownie — .Ayrshire    <"ow....352 
Winnie   of   Meadowbrook — Angus   Heifer.. 312 

Wonderful — Delaino    Ftam 33 

Woodend    Gartly — Clyde.sdale    Stallion....   77 

Ww.Mlland — Dorset     Ram 54 

Wo, (Is    Principal— Ohampion    Calf 10 

W.M.il.s   Principal — C.nind   Champion   Steer.   S3 

W.iik    Muli-s, —  Tine    Teams 155 

Work   Team   on   Farm 218 

W<irld     Beater — blester    Boar 43 

Woi-thv,    :ui — Gallowav    Bull 211 

\Vrv<I.  lands    Starliirlit  — Sliiro    Mare 164 


TAM 

f;K.\.\i>    «n  \.M  ri(  ix     \i-    \\|>-ii:i;.\    x  \ 

TK).\.\I.  snow.  UlONVlMt.  COLO..  1911. 
Kxhil.ited  l.y  the  .Vt'ricultural  Colk-Ke.  Fort 
Collins,    Colorado. 


Tamworth   Barrow — Western 3.''.2 

Tangerine — Pony     Mare 29:> 

Theodore — Suffolk     Stallion : 34 

Thin    Rind    Barrows — Hoodwine 205 

Tiger    Lily — Hackney    Stallion 225 

Tippecanoe,    44th — Polled    Durham    Bull..l7:i 

Topsy — .A.      Mule 19<i 

Tormentor — Jersey     Bull "51 

Torrent — Coach    Horse 179 

Trappiste — Belgian    Stallion 260 

Trumans"    Sensation — Shire    Gelding 2,S5 

Tulip's    Royal — Devon    Bull 91 

Uhlan — Trotting    King 334 

Cndulata    Chief — Saddle    Stallion 329 

I'pland    Hol.liy — Brown    Swi.ss    Bull 202 

ITpIand    .lethro — ^Brown    Swiss    Bull 302 

U.     S.     Perfection — Poland -Oiina    Sow....  234 

Vala — Aberdeen-Angus    Cow 7 

Vice    Commodore — Trotting    Stallion 193 

Victor — Grand    Champion    Steer 112 

Victoria    Boar — Davis    Bros 80 

Victoria    Swine — Champions 22 

Village   Belle,    2d — Shorthorn   Cow,    66.... 243 

Viola    Drummond — Ayrshire    Cow 61 

Walnut    Hall — Trotting    Sire 342 

Wanderer'.s  Violet — Polled  Durham  Cow.. 115 

Welher   I^amb — -Chicago   Champion 95 

White    Chief — Cheshire    Boar 267 

^Vhitehall    Sultan — Sihorthorn    Bull 169 

White  Mary — Yorksihlre  Sow 101 


Wn.I>IAM  PENN.  2:07 '4  —  A  COLT 
TROTTER.  A  free-for-all  trotter  and  sire 
of  trotter.'si  Sire  of  Miss  Penn,  2:16;  A. 
Penn.  2:17%:  Steel  Pen,  2:lS'/4;  Voca, 
2:19'-i:  Silver  Pen,  2:15'/4:  and  others. 
Owned  by  N.  W^.  Bowen,  of  Delphi.  Ind. 
From    photo    by    Schreiber,    of    Philadelphia. 

Wrydeland's    Sun.shine— Shire    Mare 156 

Wyeth — Thoroughbred     Horse 178 

Yeoman — Guernsey    Bull 140 

Yeska  Sunbeam — c.ii.iiisi  \    r,,\v 268 

Young    Alice's    Prin.  .       .^In.,  t  In.rn    Bull.. .275 
Young    Alice'.s    Priii<  .       siMniiH.in    Bull... 352 

Young    Bill— Saddle    Sl;illi..n 331 

Young   Premier   Chief^Berk.sliire    Boar.. .229 


Wll.T.dWMKOU  BK(>W.\ll':~AYRSniUE 
1I1';IKJ0K.  (-hainiiinn  junior  female  at  tlui 
National  Dairy  Show  of  1911;  daughter  of 
Netherhall  Brownie,  9th.  world's  chaanpion 
Ayi-shire  cow.  Bred  and  owned  by  Wiillow- 
moor  Farms,   Redmond,  state  of  Washington. 


YOUNG    AT>ICE'S   PIUXCE— SIIORTHOUN 
BULL.     See   page    275. 

Zaire    the    Great — Angus    Steer 287 

Zaza — I'ercheron     Mare 191 

Zebroid     Lordello 210 


Library 


